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The False River

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The first collection from a brilliant new British voice. A bereaved mother loiters at the school gates; an old man searches through books for the secret to eternal life; a bus driver is obsessed with one of his passengers; a young woman’s happiness causes suffering for the rest of the world. In these award-winning stories the characters’ lives have ceased to flow smoothly. They have lost marriages, children, health, control, but still they try to cope. They find safety in numbers, reassurance in killing; they worship a small girl. These are stories of great traction and voltage, rich in dark humour, beauty and bravura. The False River is a collection for our splintered times.

158 pages, Kindle Edition

Published September 26, 2019

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Nick Holdstock

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Ross Jeffery.
Author 28 books362 followers
September 26, 2019
I first discovered the tremendous voice that is Nick Holdstock when I reviewed Unthology 11 (review here) and his story ‘Half‘ – which came kicking and screaming into my world. So, I was delighted to hear that he had a collection coming out from Unthank and was overjoyed when it arrived in the post for me to review.

The collection is an emotionally charged and exquisitely polished rollercoaster, with elements of dark humour laced through many of the tales, each told in a unique and enrapturing new voice with deftly and considered prose, which captivate the mind, body and soul.

The False River is a captivating collection with each story holding an intrinsic beauty, the words and imagery, the lives collated within seem to ebb and flow across the page, with a mesmeric beauty, until you are lost in the words and drowning within the page. There are so many stories within The False River that I found a connection with, but I will focus on five which left me struck by what an undeniable new talent Nick Holdstock is to the literary / short story world.

Half – Holdstock delivers a fierce piece of fiction to open his collection, which delves deep into your chest, lays hold of your heart and crushes it. This is the second time I’ve read this story (the first when reviewing Unthology 11) and on the second reading I found it quite remarkable – I was able to pick up on various small threads sewn throughout, which I missed on the first read. The story follows the protagonist Zoe who has a unhealthy infatuation with her half brother Sam – who we realise early on is a recreational heroin user. His recreational usage soon spirals out of control and turns into a full blown addiction (this all consuming grip on his life detailed deftly by Holdstock) – this mingled with Zoe’s feelings about her infatuation with her half brother boil and bubble as the story simmers gently under the masterful touch of Holdstock. As someone who has lost a family member to addiction (long term heroin use) I was delighted to see the subject dealt with delicately by Holdstock, his visuals were astute and handled with great care and attention. The way Zoe’s meetings with her brother bookend the story (before with his declaration of using heroin and then at the height of his addiction) is a great touch which in my opinion makes the story. It’s a bittersweet, deftly crafted tale which pulls at the heartstrings as we listen to the music that is being played out on the page by these believable characters yearning for change, belonging and the cravings of their hearts.

And Then – A delightfully meandering tale through the lives of several people working for a publishing house, from the managing director to the intern. With each passing passage we see things from another character, another vantage point, something discussed in the preceding passage is then flipped on its head and shown from another characters point-of-view – revealing flaws, other lives, circumstance, personal hatred and fascinations. It’s a cauldron bubbling away, with different ingredients being added as we journey along. Holdstock’s ability to link each passage is sublime and a tool that works really well in the pacing of the story. It’s in essence normal lives being cast out into the light, dirty laundry being aired for everyone to see, a really smart and beguiling read and a testament to simple writing done well!

The Embrace – Is a devastating read, full of grief, loss and the aching despair of losing a child. It is a great feat of writing to move somebody into these feelings which play out on the page. Holdstock was able to put across the feelings of bereavement astutely and without being patronising. Being a father I have a fear and a somewhat limited grasp of what the aching pain of loss would feel like if one of my children were to die. Holdstock made me feel it even more so – there is something intrinsically beautiful in the way he expresses these feelings in The Embrace and taints the reader with the pain. Grief is all consuming and suffocating at times and these additional factors lead and build on the tension that our protagonist is facing, the choices playing out in her warped mind, swelling until the pages can’t contain it any longer, making the conclusion that much more hard hitting and poignant! Unrelentingly moving and disturbingly brilliant writing.

New Traffic Patterns May Emerge – A dark and deliciously juicy story in the offing here. I love stories that deal with the fallibility of man. This story centres around Chris who’s, how shall we put this, had a bad fucking year – deaths, assault, burglary and his girlfriend stabbed him then dumped him by text. He’s struggling to get his life back, but when he manages to pull himself out of the gutter, manages to get himself back to feeling a semblance of the person he was before, his life is thrown upside down by a text message from his ex-girlfriend wanting to meet up. What I feel works superbly well in this story is that it is in essence two stories in one, with each paragraph, flitting between two separate stories that are being told simultaneously. In the first story as discussed already it is the ongoing drama of Chris and Rachael, the other story running with it is the tale of Sally and Lucas a young boy and his girlfriend who are at a birthday party, with balloons, cake and baby rabbits. This tool is used masterfully by Holdstock and never becomes confusing, it is effortlessly unique and handled with a deft touch – although the story flits between the two it is easy to keep track of both and has a readability to it which makes the story evaporate in your hands. There is so much going on in this story and the voice of the piece is phenomenally crisp and clear and a sheer delight to unpack – it is a cracking story that really hits home…it also links with another story within the collection, but I feel that would be giving too much away if I were to divulge such a thing here!

The False River – The title story of the collection is again another delectable story which showcases Holdstock’s writing prowess and really cements him as a new powerhouse in short fiction. The False River follows the story of a bus driver, who has a habit of counting everything, signs, mileage, passengers, ages, attractiveness, traffic lights – it’s a wonderful tool that Holdstock uses, and which never gets boring, also ensuring that this piece has a completely different feel and voice to the others within the collection (there are so many different tools that Holdstock uses and so many unique tales, told in their own special way – that you could be mistaken for believing they were written by multiple authors, such is the range and contrast of stories held within this arrestingly brilliant collection – and the undeniable talent Holdstock possesses as a writer). The False River has a lot going on underneath the deftly crafted prose, and I assume that is the reason why Holdstock chose it as his title story, it is sheer brilliance in writing – sharply witty, perfectly balanced and told with a beguiling skill. It is observational writing at its very best with an attention to detail that is mesmerising and if that wasn’t enough it also has a believability to it which is enrapturing and cathartic.

There are many other tales within this collection which I loved – there is literally something for everyone within The False River – so do yourself a favour, pick it up, read it and get swept away by its brilliance!

With The False River we are truly witnessing the birth of a new and masterful storyteller.
1 review
July 2, 2019
The False River marks the arrival of an impressively talented new writer; a collection of stories that is consistently inventive, economical and readable.

A few of them are also strikingly cruel. “Poor Lucy Miller”, in particular, seems to have crawled from a Pan Book of Horror Stories; a small cat and a small boy are brutally kicked to death by a woman as a way of relieving her own abject misery. “New Traffic Patterns” provides intermittent glimpses of a little girl being abducted by a sexual predator. However, lest Holdstock be reported to the literary branch of the NSPCC, he returns to the abduction in the final story and converts it into a metafictional jeu d’esprit – not a very persuasive one – in which the girl is saved.

Usually, Holdstock is more serious; throughout the collection, grief, pain, illness, off-kilter minds, off-kilter lives, and off-kilter relationships are evoked in the context of vivid, persuasively detailed vignettes. Perceptions are intensified by realities that are skewed, fractured and godless. Background realism is maintained but offset by clever stylistic flourishes that provide a measure of formal self-awareness (in this as in other respects, Martin Amis and early Ian McEwen seem like clear influences). It’s all very well done, but for me one story rises above the others; “Ward” focuses on a teenage girl suffering laryngeal cancer. She survives the ordeal and, in a few final pages, the rest of her long life is abruptly summed up. Holdstock’s stories often end with epiphanic moments, but “Ward” manages to go beyond the moment to convey something larger – something like a negative transcendence. If he can go on to do more work of this order...

I should add that I received a copy of The False River for review.
Profile Image for Lucy Goodfellow.
224 reviews23 followers
November 29, 2019
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 5 Stars

I first read the work of Nick Holdstock in Unthology 11. His short story Half was the highlight of that book and it is also featured in this anthology as a superb example of his striking prose. This collection explores humanity in their darkest moments. Although every piece is as well crafted as the next The Embrace and Ward are perhaps his best works yet.

The Embrace is an exceptionally heartfelt and intimate exploration of grief, motherhood and mental health. The warped perspective of the protagonist is intelligently written and perfect for exploring the mental strain that comes with the loss of a child and the suffocating sense of loss that accompanies it.

Ward shows the spiral of a girl struggling with illness and the idea of recovery. This is a life story in few words.

Overall, I cannot recommend this collection enough. I am glad that readers will finally be able to buy Holdstock’s work in a collection like this.

To buy it now CLICK HERE
Follow Nick at @NickHoldstock on Twitter or visit his Website to see what he will be working on next.

Trigger Warning ⚠: Abduction, animal cruelty, incest, addiction, assault and kidnapping.

I received an advance review copy for free from Unthank Books. I am leaving this review voluntarily 📚.
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