November 2023 (4 stars)
I read this simultaneously with Young Tom, being too impatient to see how the story progressed to wait to finish Young Tom first. It wasn't at all confusing to alternate between the two books – though as I had already read Young Tom so recently the plot of that book was fairly fresh in my memory so I wasn't struggling to juggle and make sense of two separate plots about the same boy in my mind. But I actually think reading both books simultaneously might be the best way of reading them, or certainly an interesting exercise, because there seemed to be so many points of connection. It felt almost natural to be moving from one book to the other, to be noticing parallels in events, or in the order in which events occurred. I would read a few chapters of one, then read a few chapters of the other, then move back to the other again. Some scenarios were repeated almost exactly – like the rat swimming across the river to look at Tom – and it made one wonder if it was deliberate, whether the books were written to follow/repeat a particular pattern, or whether such things were subconscious or unintentional on Reid's part.
Once again I loved Reid's style. He is a beautiful writer. But once again it is not really a happy book. It still leaves the reader tinged with regret at what Tom has lost – a bosom friend of his own age. The future relationship between Tom and Uncle Stephen looks like it is going to be a problematical one morally (from the reader's point of view).
I've read other people's reviews of this book but they seem to see things there which I don't see – or read things into it which I didn't. I don't know if that is because they are more perceptive than me, or because they read editions with introductions which put ideas and interpretations into their head which aren't obvious to the uninitiated like myself. I just enjoyed reading it as a story without wishing to read into it any veiled messages.
Lovely though Reid's style consistently is, only one passage actually jumped out at me from all the rest, three simple lines:
'I love you, Stephen,' Tom whispered.
'You're not to think of that now.'
'How can I help thinking of it when I'm holding your ears.'
October 2024 (5 stars)
See my review of 4th - 6th November 2023. Clearly reading two books simultaneously coloured that review. This time I was reading Uncle Stephen alone, with my impressions of it being influenced only by memories of the other books in the trilogy. Tom is fifteen here, but he often doesn't sound it, or he seems like he must be a very young-looking fifteen year old as it is often stressed that he looks small compared to everyone around him. It sometimes feels like the timings don't really fit in that well with the other two books. Within just a very few years his mother has died, his father has remarried, and his father has died, and yet you are made to feel like he lost his mother in the dim and distant past instead of within the last three years or so.
I'm not sure that I feel entitled to give this book a rating because I feel like I can't rate it objectively. If this had been the only book Forrest Reid ever wrote, it might have been a four-star read, but because I love Reid, and his style, and his other works, and because this book forms part of a larger work which I love, I want to give it a five-star rating.
If I found the ending rather melancholy last time I read it (perhaps influenced by reading it in conjuction with Young Tom?) I didn't experience the same thing this time, and I felt it ended more hopefully and it felt less of a tragedy that the young Stephen had to go away.
Like the first time I read it, exactly the same few sentences stood out, so I will repeat them again:
'I love you, Stephen,' Tom whispered.
'You're not to think of that now.'
'How can I help thinking of it when I'm holding your ears.'