The Forty First Wink is not your average kind of novel. It’s a laugh-out-loud, ‘glorious romp’ of a novel, which offers a delightful mix of humour, adventures, quirky characters and memorable dialogue. It’s also James Walley’s debut as an author, and another excellent offering by Ragnarok Publications.
The story starts off with a bang (literally) when our main protagonist, Marty, wakes up with a hangover, a gang of polo mallet wielding monkeys and a mysterious voice in his wardrobe. There are also the whistling, can-can dancing birds, the talking pirate doll (Timbers), the crazy reflection in the mirror… In short, it’s a dream unlike any other you’ve ever had. And it only escalates from there. Throughout the pages we get to meet creepy clowns, Jamaican, French and German canaries (the distinction is important), a crew of pirates that rivals Jack Sparrow’s, and the so-called League of Fairly Impressive Super Folk… Simply put, the book is a wonderful mosaic of colourful, memorable and fantastic images, glued together by a fast-paced plot and some of the best dialogue in a ‘comedy’ novel I've read in a while.
To illustrate that, here’s a quick glance at one of my favourite interactions between Marty and Timbers, which also introduces a very special… hmm… super hero:
‘“Well, there's the Tea Lady,” Timbers mumbled, “but I doubt she'd be of much use.”
“No, she doesn't sound it.” Marty rubbed his forehead in anticipation of what would surely be imminently onrushing disappointment. “What does she do?”
Timbers, to his credit, tried to dress it up, “Well, she has this shiny tray that she flings about. Oh, and she can shoot hot tea from her eyes.”
Marty puffed out his cheeks and shook his head skeptically. “That's not massively helpful.”
Timbers was defiant. “Depends if you want a cup of tea.”’
And that’s just the Tea Lady. Needless to say, the rest of the League is not much better (or is that worse?), but I’d definitely love to see them in their own adventure. In fact, the whole cast of The Forty First Wink is assembled brilliantly and will surely stay with you long after the final pages of the novel. That, in my view, is one of Walley’s greatest strengths as a writer – the ability to portrait unlikely heroes.
Another highpoint is the writing style. To be perfectly honest, the first comparison that came to my mind when I started reading the novel was Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, and Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There. Have you read Alice? It’s quite a unique experience, the first time ever you open those pages and ‘meet’ the White Rabbit, the Caterpillar, the Hatter, and, of course, the Cheshire Cat.
I felt exactly the same way while discovering and exploring James Walley’s world. There was that same sense of wonder, same sense of fascination, that lets you know you've got something special in your hands. The prose, too, reminded me of the lyrical, light and accessible style of Carroll’s Alice, only it was fast-forwarded to the present, thus sparing us some of those longish, nineteenth century sentences…
Last but not least, I feel that The Forty First Wink is a novel that would appeal equally to teens and their parents, and which offers something for everyone, being fans of Terry Pratchett, Lewis Carroll, Fantasy, or good literature in general.
As a conclusion, I’d suggest you take advantage of the summer months and warm, sunny weather, and sit back and enjoy the light-hearted, fun and exciting adventure that is The Forty First Wink. Just don’t read it too quickly, because you’d definitely want more once you’re finished! Personally, I'm eager to see where James Walley takes us next…