I seem to be on a quest for awkward books, as right after finishing Cunningham's "A Home at the End of the World" I have stumbled upon "Another World" by Pat Barker.
I was feeling hungry for another book of Barker's, as almost two years have passed after I finished the "Regeneration" trilogy. It fascinated me at that time in so many senses, that I was a bit afraid of reading another book by Barker, lest it should disappoint me. "Another World" did not disappoint me at all and I believe now, was the right book to follow the trilogy.
The action of "Another World" takes place in our time and revolves around a family, whose main characters are a university professor Nick and his grandfather Geordie, a 101 years old veteran of WWI. There are a lot of other characters who are important, and at the same time they remain somewhat in the background: not fully developed, not fully understood. I feel that the author wanted them to remain this way, getting the book to closer resemble real life.
When I think about Geordie, I try to imagine the characters from "Regeneration" living in our time and society, and I fail. But there he is, a living fossil, a relic from the times of the World War I, placed in our days. One of the main themes Barker analyses is memory. Geordie's traumatic war memories are suddenly becoming stronger as he is getting closer to his deathbed. Throughout the book and its different characters Barker questions the consistency and permanence of our memory, suggesting that it may be malleable instead, changing and adapting together with the environment and perceptions of other people.
Another topic Barker skillfully analyses, and which I found uncomfortable and at the same time captivating, is death. I had a feeling that no detail, no dismaying aspect of it has escaped the author's eye. Reading the passages of the book was difficult at times, as it brought to surface some related memories of my own, but it also brought me closer to the story and its characters.
A really great book, recommended to those who are not afraid of being lead out of their comfort zone.