Gregory Lynn must have had a very bad childhood because, when he uncovers his old school papers from his mother's attic after her death, he sets about to commit some "acts of revision" on his former teachers. Yet there is more to this novel than a story of revenge. It is a beguiling tale told through a series of interviews with Gregory, who mixes fact with fiction and whose reality is often more distorted than his fantasy. In this regard, the book becomes both a chilling thriller and a twisted look at the nature of recorded narrative, a unique combination that results in an intriguing adventure.
Unforgettable. I bought a copy of this book second hand a couple of years ago and was lax in writing a review straightaway. But something triggered a memory of its climax today, and I felt I had to share my thoughts on this book. A brilliant premise, an apt title, and a storyline that will keep you enthralled and horrified at the same time. And that memorable climax was mind blowing!
The novels narrator and protagonist is Gregory Lynn, a disgruntled, former student of a school from he attended as a child. Always a difficult student, he is expelled for an attack on a teacher, and in the intervening years, between then and the present, his rancor grows. Encompassing each teacher he had, Gregory hatches a plan for revenge. It results in the murder of a teacher. Reading this now, the portrait that emerges is of a school shooter whose fantasies and obsession overtake him. The supposed slights that he believes each teacher is guilty of don’t necessarily tell the whole story. Gregory has a weird way of seeing things, the world and his interactions within it. He isn’t a character one empathizes with. Finding his old school report cards is enough to set him off on his path of revenge. His plans are cartoon images. All in all he’s one creepy individual.
This novel plunges readers into the warped psyche of Gregory Lynn, a 34-year-old London man who has lived his entire life in the house with his mother. After her death, he inventories the house and finds old school reports about himself that prompt him to revisit memories and old teachers. Gregory is by turns socially awkward, hilariously funny, sharply observant, pathetic, disgusting, heartbreaking, deranged, brilliant, violent. We see the world through his eyes, both as a child and as an adult. As the book takes us deeper into this man, we gradually understand his half-formed logic, a combination of received wisdom and misperceptions based on what he hears from parents, teachers, siblings, and others. This is not a comfortable read, but it is definitely a fascinating one.
Really great book. I was deeply involved from page one. First person narrative follows the psychopath Protagonist in preparations for his trial .... to discover what he did and why. He remains unlikeable, disturbing and yet we the reader want to know what he did and why - to understand - and indeed by the end we do.
3.5/5⭐️ the book was interesting but i sometimes felt myself being confused or bored and having to reread stuff. the chapters were long but there were breaks in between some the plot. seeing how greg twisted the plot to his ideal outcome was kooky but created a nice depth to his character.
This the first book I've read by this author but it won't be the last. I can't believe it's his debut novel. It reminds me of novels by Barbara Vine. Excellent
I liked the brutality of the novel and the depravity of the protagonist. The author brings you right into his twisted universe and you are there watching as he dishes out his revenge. The writing is only sub-par and therefore only three star worthy.
Some might not like this book but I found it very well done. It's from the eyes of a crazy nut. If you're a teacher, in anyway, you'll hope you were always nice to all your students.