Philip Ridley writes this queer, magical realist, coming-of-age epic in the poppy, immediate style of a play. Colours swarm and magic dances around every character in a fantasy world with seemingly more queer characters than straight, one where justice is served for the oppressed, where no bigot is changed, yet our protagonist finds strength and identity despite them.
After his eighteenth birthday, Concord develops a relationship with a strange older woman on his street, Mama Zepp. She knows all the sordid stories that have entangled the lives of the street's many residents, including the heartbreak and tragedy of her queer neighbours of her generation. With folksy and understated magic, she allows Concord to experience the story in strange and affecting ways, until it is his own. Through the telling, Concord gains the strength to seek his own love, stand up against oppression, and live his truth honestly.
There are a lot of twists and turns in this novel, covering over one hundred years of a neighbourhood's history. The magic of the book is in how these stories are told, the rapid-fire, pithy dialogue, the elements of fantasy, and the unique use of onomatopoeia and synesthetic descriptions.
The romantic relationship, the most grounded element of the plot, and foundational to story, isn't nearly as effective as these flashier elements. The book is so full of witticisms and observations and characters and plot turns and magic that not quite enough room was left to develop a relationship that, in words on the page, seems to be a lot deeper than the story realistically allows. The stories and their fantastic presentation are pretty. But without the emotional weight where it is most required, the demands to take the darker elements seriously just aren't strong enough to make them matter as they should. Another 100 pages dedicated to the development of this relationship alone could have gone a long way to raise the stakes of the plot, and inspire empathy in the reader for more believable characters and their relationship.
Many of the numerous characters in Mr Fury also suffer from a lack of nuance and depth. Most are either angelically virtuous, or shockingly corrupt. One character in particular makes a major turn in the book, and is portrayed as the latter from the moment they are out of the protagonist's favour. This, and the lack of any redemption or change in any of the antagonists casts these players in a high-contrast monochrome over which this story splashes all its colour. It may be that this was a choice made to create a fairy tale world for the book. Personally, I think that a broader range of characterization may have given the book more impact.
I recommend this book especially to high school aged teenagers looking for a hopeful, queer, magical mystery tour.
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eBook
Valancourt Books, December 6, 2016
Originally published as a shorter book with the same title in 1989
Three Stars
March 28-April 3, 2018
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