THIS BOOK IS SO AWESOME!
I LOVE THIS AWESOME BOOK!
In fact, I just climbed out of my bed late at night due to intrusive, spinning thoughts about how great this book was, and as it seems I can't sleep from the excitement, hopefully writing this will help. I got this out of the library but now that I'm done I think I'd better buy my own copy, not so much because I need to own it as because I should give the lovely and talented Anna Freeman some money. She's almost certainly a wonderful person and deserves handsome remuneration and many prestigious honors and awards! I definitely feel in her debt having enjoyed so much what she's written.
Okay so at first glance this isn't a book I'd normally pick up, I guess because books about certain old-timey eras and topics make me think of those other books we used to pass around in sixth grade... you know, the ones with gold foil cutaway covers that depicted a breathtakingly lovely lady with amazing boobs spilling out of her gown as she clung rapturously to Fabio's loins? Yes I know not all historical novels are salacious tales of indomitable heiresses being deliciously savaged by "purple-headed warriors" and then teaching great hairy brutes how to love, but I'll admit to being suspicious and judging by its cover, this looked like an upmarket version of those, with a bust of an old-timey pretty lady melded into an impressionistic skyline, bleagh. I never would've chosen this on the cover alone, only a friend recommended it because in actual fact it is about a LADY BOXER and I am a lady boxer of sorts, though certainly not like the one in this book and after reading all that she went through I've resolved to stop whining so much about how I can't get good sparring at my gym.
So, The Fair Fight is just a ridiculous amount of fun. It's fun in the way that Dickens is fun, if you crossed Dickens with Rocky and, I don't know, The Slits?
My favorite thing about this book (and there are so many other things in it I love) is that neither of the two main female characters is attractive. This is ridiculously rare and incredibly important, and is the reason I hope to God they never make a Hollywood movie of this book even though I do badly want Anna Freeman to become rich. Much has been made recently of the new Mad Max remake's pop-feminist cred, to which I would point out that the movie is about a truckful of models and that those characters only matter because of their perfect looks. It's almost unheard of for a Hollywood movie to treat a female character as important if she isn't gorgeous, and the same is true for a lot of books and not just those aforementioned bodice-rippers with their creamy-skinned emerald-eyed ingenues. Having recently become a mother, I think even more than I did before about how screwed up I've been by all of this my whole life and I worry about my daughter. I don't want her to spend the amount of time I have agonizing about how she doesn't look like Charlize Theron and feeling like her story means less than those of girls who do (this is assuming my daughter does not, in fact, grow up to look like Charlize Theron, which, well, I guess we don't know for sure yet but I'd feel pretty safe betting with those odds).
The heroines of The Fair Fight aren't just "not beautiful' in the way we were promised Scarlett O'Hara wasn't; they're terrible looking by the standards of their day and ours. Ruth, the boxer born in a brothel, is missing most of her teeth and has a nose that's been knocked sideways in addition to all the other scars and damage inflicted by her brutal pre-Queensberry fight career. All this after not being initially attractive enough as a ten-year-old to follow her prettier thirteen-year-old sister into the family prostitution business... Our other girl -- awkward, lonely drunk Charlotte -- starts off with all the advantages of wealth and good looks but is horribly scarred by the smallpox that kills most of her family and (spoiler alert!) unlike Esther Summerson of Bleak House her scars don't magically fade away towards the end of the book.
These two narrators and a third, handsome bisexual gambling addict and layabout George Bowdon, take their turns relaying the action. There are three other central characters -- Ruth's sister Dora; Charlotte's brother Perry; and George's schoolmate Granville, who arguably does most structurally to tie all the characters together -- who we don't hear from directly but get to know well, who interact with each other in various complex ways. The world they live in has shades of Mad Max in a sense, not in being a dystopian Australian future (it's set in Bristol around the beginning of the nineteenth century) but in being an extremely brutal and unforgiving environment. The characters experience mostly hostility, neglect, and even violence from their families and a lot of the people in their lives, and all (in particular the women and the poor ones) are terribly constrained by their circumstances.
Yet the novel isn't a sob story but instead is rough after rough and tough round of pure fun. That's because Freeman can sure write and she's nailed the voices here, in particular Ruth's. Her use of slang in particular stands out (at the gym this afternoon I kept calling punches "fibs" in my head, as she does!) but all the diction throughout it is just so fucking great and I should think of another way to say this but I can't: FUN. This book was just so much fun! And that's great.
If you're not interested in boxing you might not be quite as ridiculously, idiotically thrilled over this as I am, but that is certainly no obstacle to your enjoyment at all. I don't remember the last time I had this much fun reading a book -- it was infinitely more fun than that Mad Max remake, which I personally found dull and not nearly as good as its incredible preview. You might disagree with me about that and you might not be so crazy about A Fair Fight, but if you like the idea of an updated Dickensy/Thackerayish/whatever British novelist of two-hundred-or-so-years-ago kind of thing with every kind of scum and underbelly and vice they could only allude to in most books written at that time and a grimy spirited feminist kick to it, I'd recommend buying (not just checking out) this book.
Wheeeee!