When we were young -a long long time ago- a friend of mine and me joked about the continuous crises: the first-year-at-uni crisis, the mid-degree crisis and of course, the last-degree-year crisis. Hey, our life was so full!
This is a first-year-at-uni crisis novel, dissected by his protagonist and narrator, Brian. He presents himself as a working-class lad setting off on his big university journey, with all its appealing prospects: leaving home to live on your own -that is to say, in your shared accommodation-, meeting lots of attractive interesting girls, learning all sorts of important things and even becoming part of the University Challenge team!
Brian is a bit different in that he is the only one in his group of friends to have earned a grant to go to uni: the other lads are stuck in dreary underpaid jobs in the middle of a recession, as the book is set in the 1980´s. Of course, I couldn´t help comparing the situation of these funded students with today´s recession and the exhorbitant price of university fees. Being paid to study? It seems like the stuff of fairy tales now!
Predictably, as Brian tries to meet as many people as possible and to have as many experiences as possible, he neglects his mum and his friends: he doesn´t go back for weekends, doesn´t phone much and when his best friend comes to visit, he is unkind. So this is not entirely a campus-novel: it is also a novel about what is outside the campus, about the friends we have left behind and the families who are carrying on with their lives.
I gather that universities are the place where middle class and lower class undergraduates meet upper class undergraduates, the kind of students who went to public schools and have tons of cash, property and privileges. This was a topic in "One Day" too. It seems to happen for the first time, too. As I am not British, I was surprised by such a deep class division. Did they never go to the same pubs and clubs wherever they all came from? Here Brian falls for blonde posh girl Alice, and they strike up a sort of friendship that degenerates into farce at various points, notably when Brian spends a desultory Christmas holiday at Alice´s family´s country home. Well, there is a blond dream girl in every guy´s past, so we will not hold down any hard feelings against Brian. Who can blame him for trying? Not me, certainly.
I look forward to my kids enjoying university life, even if I haven´t got a clue how on earth we are going to be able to afford this. Well, my son has only just started Reception, so it may be a bit early to worry about it.