Pansies is what you get when Richard Siken's "Crush" and Bruce Springsteen's mid to late 70s albums make sweet sweet love by the Tyne (that's clearly the river in the name of Bruce's 1980 song/album) and their union is blessed with a little Geordie baby. And then Lana Del Rey sings Video Games over the baby's cradle.
(Sourcebooks feel free to hire me to do the promo for the new edition, I am evidently a marketing wiz of the highest order and none of my references are obscure)
Look, for me personally the romance bit of this book would be a solid 4 star read. I mean it's Alexis Hall, so it's obviously well-written, funny, thoughtful, poignant, the works - but something just didn't fully click for me. Maybe it felt like we didn't get to spend nearly enough time with Fen so he was relegated more to the "dream boy" role? Maybe I never fully recovered from the third act conflict? (I won't go into spoilers but just let it be known that I thoroughly dislike the third act conflict as a romance structure beat.) Maybe instalove is just not my cuppa? Either way, on the strength of the romance alone, this would have been a pure 4 star read.
But- but-
ALFIE.
So after much deliberation it is a 5-star read (4.5 to be more precise), on account of my boy Alfie Identity Struggles Bell. And you, gentle reader, will now be treated to a ridiculously long essay on why Pansies' depiction of Alfie Bell is THE character exploration of masculinity, queerness, working class and regional identity. Good? Good.
So. We meet our boy Alfie on his best mate Kev's wedding in South Shields, where they both grew up. Alfie has been living and working in London (and making A LOT of money), he's so used to code-switching that his accent (initially) sounds a lot posher than the rest of the folks at the reception, and he's gay. But he only figured out he was gay like a year or two ago, and he's not even thirty yet.
So Alfie's this big strapping Northern lad, socialized in a working-class environment, convinced for most of his life he was a red-blooded heterosexual... and now he is living the life of a rich gay southern banker. But that "work hard-play hard" City lifestyle also clashes with what he wants out of life (a partner to protect and care for, kids, domestic bliss), which is shaped as much by his personality and desires as by his upbringing.
In short, Alfie feels like he is neither fish nor fowl.
Now, the novel's set-up (rich business person goes back to their home town, is forced to re-evaluate their lifestyle and priorities after experiencing a profound connection with the local baker/beekeeper/florist/rancher/farmer) is clearly the stuff of a certain kind of low-budget Hallmark TV movie. What Hall does is: a) makes the rich business person rediscovering the joys of domesticity a man and b) forces the protagonist to reframe his own upbringing and youth to see how a person with so much internalized homophobia and very strong feelings about How Men Behave(TM) can even begin to build domesticity.
And this produces so many interesting conflicts (even though some of them are downright painful: see my comments on 3rd act conflict above). Because the partner he wants to have this life with does not have Alfie's hangups - Fen has always been very visibly queer (so much so that in school he got mercilessly bullied, by Alfie among other people!!); for him, there is no code-switching, no doubting, no overcoming lowkey toxic ideals of masculinity. Fen was a bullied queer kid from the North who got out, got himself a great life down South, and only went back because his family needed him. Alfie is the one who was...basically great at being a Proper Lad, had the most normative possible working-class male socialization, did everything right - and now has no idea who he is or how to live his life. And that makes him a FASCINATING protagonist. (And just on a personal note, very relatable. Not that I have a similar background/life story, but Hall's depiction of a person who is kinda neither here nor there, and feels like there are these different versions of them existing in different places is just...oof. Been there, bestie!)
So. Pansies is very good. You should read it while streaming either Bruce Springsteen or Alexis Hall's Pansies playlist. Or Lana Del Rey. Case closed.