Byron and Shelley
by Glenn Haybittle
Although this book doesn't publish until October, and I usually strictly read my advanced copies in order of publication, something drew me into this short story collection the moment I received it. The cover. How could I put that away for 5 months? I only intended to whet my appetite, but I found myself picking it back up again and again.
There are 23 stories, and although the protagonist is different in each, although the settings vary, predominantly London and Florence, with some in Venice, Jerusalem, Kansas City, and references to Rome, Hamburg, Memphis, Prague, they contain very similar themes throughout. None are a complete story, rather a slice of time where an aha moment occurs regarding the human trait to curate elements of one's identity.
There is something startling about this author's writing. He puts words together beautifully with elegant phrasing and razor sharp metaphors. He describes human nature so accurately, but dwells so long in the shame and embarrassment of self awareness that it often feels like overshare, or perhaps eavesdropping on a private and highly sensitive conversation. Because there is such cross pollination between these stories (the David Bowie obsession, the cold mother, the record shop/ PYE/ recording industry, the Jewish heritage. betrayal of or by girlfriends, effemininity, a tendency towards navel-gazing) and because of the astonishingly authentic insights revealed within the internal narrative, perhaps it's autofiction? It is uncomfortable, thought provoking and moving.
My favourite one is Mother Love, a raw and highly relatable story about a son returning from Italy to England to care for his mother who is suffering from dementia. My least favourite is Byron and Shelley which was jarring in it's incompatibility with the other 22 stories. These stories might not work alone, but together they are addictive.
This book is billed as historical fiction, which to me isn't strictly accurate. If you require plot, this is not for you, but if you like to take a sneaky peek into what makes some people tick, this might be just the ticket.
Publication date: 9th October 2023
Thanks to #netgalley and #cheynewalk for the eGalley