Nominated for the National Book Award 2018
This is a book about the apocalypse and about contemporary America - kudos to the NBA, because looking at the latest Booker longlist, there are zero nominees that come even close to dissecting post-Brexit Britain as fearlessly and presciently. This novel daringly tackles problems specific to the United States, and there is strength in confronting inconvenient truths, especially when done so poetically and intelligently.
Our protagonist, 14-year-old Pearl, and her mother Margot live in a car that is standing in a trailer park in Florida. Margot gave birth to Pearl when she was only 16 and consequently fled her affluent, but cruel father. Many of the other inhabitants of the trailer park are also average people who fell on hard times: There are Mexican immigrants, a former teacher with a disabled daughter who lost everything after her now deceased husband fell ill and she had to pay high medical bills, and a one-legged veteran with his family, all of them now stranded on a piece of land close to a dump, next to a polluted river that produces baby conjoined twin alligators and a skink with twelve legs. When the dubious local pastor allows a young man named Eli to live with him, announcing to help out an old friend, Margot falls in love with Eli, unassuming of what this might mean for her and Pearl...
As the title suggests, guns are everywhere, and they have assumed almost spiritual powers: While everything we associate with life - people, animals, nature - dies, the guns seem to have eternal lives, they are elevated from objects to actors, as their pure presence influences the outcome of situations. Pearl senses the presence of Native American spirits, she constantly hears the songs her music-loving mother taught her, and she feels how the guns radiate the lives they have taken and that they will take. Although the people are dominated by the gun culture, they love their guns: A mutilated veteran, his own body destroyed by weapons, still enjoys unnecessarily shooting an animal, and men spend time "killing the river" (shooting at the riverbed) and even shooting at the sky, "shooting angels". Kids grow up with Gun Coloring Books, and when they become orphans because their parents got shot, they are referred to as "shoots". Guns are an economic factor, and people's idols don't give them hope anymore - they have been shot.
Another important theme is poison: People pollute the environment, they drink, eat and breathe in poison, and they emanate poison through toxic behavior. It is interesting to note that animal cadavers (and probably also human corpses) are scattered over the dump where kids play, and where the dead become poisonous for the living. I love how masterfully Clement plays with these themes throughout her story. The whole atmosphere she evokes, everything told through the eyes of Pearl, is menacing, bleak and mesmerizing - I could not put this book down.
Instead of chasing the American Dream, Margot advises Pearl to flee by dreaming herself away - is this today's America? This book is highly topical, but also very poetic and full of ingenious metaphors. A very powerful novel, and a very worthy contestant for the NBA.