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The Peckham Experiment

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Guy Ware's new novel charts a course from the 1930s onwards through the fragmentary memories of the 85 year-old Charlie, whose identical twin brother JJ has recently died. Sons of a working-class Communist family, growing up in the radical Peckham Experiment and orphaned by the Blitz, the twins emerge from the war keen to build the New Jerusalem.

In 1968, JJ’s ideals are rocked by the fatal collapse of a tower block his council and Charlie’s development company have built. When the entire estate is demolished in 1986 JJ retires, apparently defeated. Now he is dead and Charlie, preparing for the funeral, relives their history, their family and their politics. It’s a story of how we got to where we are today told in a voice – opinionated, witty, garrulous, indignant, guilty, deluded and, as the night wears on, increasingly drunken – that sucks us in to both the idealism and the corruption it depicts, leaving us wondering just where we stand.

196 pages, Paperback

Published November 15, 2022

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Guy Ware

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Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
410 reviews243 followers
November 21, 2022
“A mirror image is not identical: it is the exact opposite. I know that now. I could not have been you”

..

I have to admit that I don’t generally read non-fiction, not because I don’t like to be kept informed, but simply because, as ever, time is the greatest enemy of this reader and I prefer the escapism of my fiction books! However, after finishing this fictionalised tribute to the real Peckham Experiment, the many questions left unanswered genuinely makes me want to try and get my hands on a copy of the original reference book “The Peckham Experiment: a study of the living structure of society”, which was written way back in the 1940s. In the author section above, Guy Ware gives a short version of the Experiment’s ethos and aims, which sparked my interest.

There is also one other particular event, the Ronan Point collapse in 1968, which although once again given a little fictional artistic licence by the author, had me intrigued enough to check out as many old press articles as I could find online, especially in the wake of the quite recent ‘Grenfell’ disaster, where so many tenants lost their lives.

So, let’s get down to the details of the storyline…

..

Much of this story is set in one flat, within the site of the original Peckham experiment complex, which has been refurbished and repurposed as housing. Charlie, our main protagonist, is 85 years old and disabled, needing to use either a stick, or his mobility scooter when he leaves home. This makes the property he chose, designed around the original wrought iron spiral staircase, a danger to his physical health to say the least. However, he continues to live there as much out of spite as anything else, whether to thwart the efforts of his septuagenarian niece Diana who insists on having a key to the place ‘just in case’, or simply as the serving of some misguided penance for his many past misdemeanours and a life lived mostly under the radar. He does leave home on a regular basis, and as a further act of defiance, doesn’t always take the paths of least resistance to reach his destination, which is usually either the park or his local convenience store, thus further testing the boundaries of his endurance.

Right from the off, the seeds are carefully sown by Diana, to insinuate that Charlie is suffering from early-stage dementia, and indeed the signs could be taken that way if you chose to. However, during the twenty-four-hour period over which this story takes place, Charlie remembers some amazing facts and vividly drawn details from his entire life, a feat which I would probably struggle to achieve, and I am considerably younger than him. He is however a curmudgeonly, rather testy individual, which probably doesn’t endear him to many people and that together with his proclivity for more than a drop of the hard stuff, I think sees him living a fairly isolated and lonely life, which might account for some of his momentary memory lapses and acts of defiance.

Charlie had a twin brother JJ, who has sadly recently passed away and Charlie has been charged with writing and delivering the eulogy at his funeral, which, as he has left it until the last moment, is now the following day, hence the all-nighter he is faced with. You might have thought that this would be a relatively easy assignment, however, when Charlie begins his journey of reminiscence, it soon becomes clear that the chequered lives the brothers had led, wouldn’t necessarily make for easy listening to the outside world and he is having trouble selecting some memories which would place JJ in a favourable light, although not too much more favourable than his own. They may have been identical in appearance, however in personality they couldn’t have been further apart, although in all fairness, many of JJ’s errors of judgement and mistakes, had been made in the shadow of, and often as the scapegoat for, his errant brother, who had always sailed pretty close to the wind in his business dealings and probably not always on the right side of the law in his private life either. In fact, many of Charlie’s business ventures were downright illegal and actually caused loss of life on more than one occasion, whilst his homosexuality, although not openly flaunted, was never kept that closely under the radar either, given that it had been against the law for some of his early adulthood.

After JJ retires from his position with the council, never really ever having come to terms with his part in the tragedy which killed so many residents on the Rochester estate, Charlie continues with his lucrative, extra-curricular activities and the two become estranged for the best part of a decade. It is Charlie who is eventually moved to make first contact, with the two forming an uneasy truce, meeting occasionally for a drink, although this is always on neutral territory and never in each other’s homes. Even this small act of reconciliation can’t go smoothly for them though and on one such outing they are involved in a bomb blast at the very pub they were heading for, just minutes before they entered.

Add to the mix that JJ’s funeral has been arranged for a general election day at which Charlie fully intends to vote in his own inimitable style, so by the time the new day dawns it is a rather bedraggled, sleep deprived and slightly pickled Charlie, who discards everything he has written, throws caution to the wind, grabs his copy of some of the very raunchy writings of his favourite author, The Earl of Rochester, and leaves for the crematorium, defiantly intent on giving the mourners a eulogy to remember!

..

This inspired and compelling book is multi-layered, highly textured, haunting and definitely intriguing. There are no defined chapters as such, with just a scant few paragraph breaks from time to time, giving me space to gather my thoughts and assimilate the many subtle and some not-so-subtle, nuances of the storyline. I would generally be a little nonplussed by this formatting of a work of fiction, however at a little over 200 pages and given that this was essentially a constant narrative by a single protagonist, it worked really well, giving a rather satisfying diarised essay style structure to the finished piece, which was easy to assimilate.

It is obvious that the dire consequences of some of their joint actions, affected JJ much more than Charlie, as following the demolition of the entire site of the Rochester estate, which had been plagued with problems since its original inception some twenty years previously, JJ immediately retired, leaving Charlie to carry on with his shonky wheeling-dealing, corrupt deals, and sub-standard developments. Charlie seems quite happy to share and display his lack of moral fibre and dishonesty, as if it was a badge of honour, with the fault always lying at someone else’s door, rather than his own. There were one or two moments in his soul searching to find something good to say about JJ, when I felt he might just be showing a small pang of conscience about his part in the deaths of so many people, and I tried to reconcile this with the fact that he might well have been led astray by Peter, a Danish architect and a much older man, who saw the young Charlie, still coming to terms with his sexuality, as an easy, soft target for some of his nefarious schemes.

Author Guy Ware did an amazing job of deliberately crafting the narrative to be a little rough around the edges, befitting the rambling style and demeanour, age and mental capacity of the narrator. This certainly made the experience more immersive, evocative, poignant and disturbingly frank and honest than many traditionally ‘polished’ biographies, which is what in effect Charlie revealed over the course of his marathon trip down memory lane. However, without needing to scratch too deeply below the surface bluff and bluster, Charlie’s revelations are still often raw and passionate, guilt ridden and shocking. For me though, Charlie was never going to make enough reparations to exonerate himself and his periods of regret and remorse sounded like nothing more than self-pity, rather than a tangible apology, either to the families of the many people’s lives he had changed forever, or to his own brother, whose abject grief and guilt at his part in events never left him and in part destroyed his own marriage.

Whilst the physical footprint of this story is very narrow, some beautifully textured and brutally honest descriptive narrative, expanded the scope and range of my armchair travels, to the point where I might have been sat in the room with Charlie, or walking beside him, maybe as a substitute for JJ, in his many reminiscences. His words often evoked an almost too realistic sense of time and place, often laced with a dour perceptive wit and a sharp tongue, which cocked a snook at convention and the social mores of both 2017, and indeed, much of the preceding eighty-five years.

As children of the original Peckham Experiment, what did JJ and Charlie’s time really have to show for it, other than the glaringly obvious fact that you can take two siblings (in this case identical twins), offer them the same future opportunities and their lives will still take completely divergent routes and tread separate pathways. Did this make the experiment a success or failure for the two men, or indeed for any of the other families who took part in it? – I’ll leave you to make your own determination about that!

Sometimes reading something different from my usual selection of genres is like a breath of fresh air and I firmly believe that what makes reading such a wonderful experience for me, is that with each and every new book, I am taken on a unique and individual journey, by authors who fire my imagination, stir my emotions and stimulate my senses. This was definitely one of those “one of a kind” experiences, which had the power to evoke so many feelings, that I’m sure I won’t have felt the same way about it as the last reader, nor the next. I can only recommend that you read The Peckham Experiment for yourself and see where your journey leads you!

Thank you for an amazing trip, Guy!
Profile Image for SamB.
262 reviews14 followers
May 4, 2023
I really enjoyed this. I loved spending time with Charlie and his ramblings, and seeing the social history of (South) London through his eyes - especially the combination of housing/local government and the gay scene. The social commentary was complex with no easy answers, and I enjoyed how complicated the book was - an unreliable narrator getting more unreliable as the night wears on, and a structure that makes you really embed yourself in Charlie's mind in order to stick with the narrative.
Profile Image for Bel.
899 reviews58 followers
September 30, 2023
Our Friends in the North if written by Ali Smith and set in Peckham. I loved the style - what a voice Charlie is - and the spectre of the Grenfell tragedy on the horizon adds so much poignancy and grief. Effortlessly slides into my top 3 books in 2023.
Profile Image for Laura Linsi.
31 reviews3 followers
December 14, 2022
* requires knowing the local context. Somehow even hyper-local.
* sometimes didactic (e.g. jargon-related convos)
* l.i.f.e. (although with all the getting by, there are a few too many major events?)
* doesn’t necessarily leave you excited for the next day (i.e. outlook is bleak)
* all in all I enjoyed the narration, the singular point of view, the quickness or length of 1 night.
Profile Image for El Hugh .
103 reviews2 followers
December 14, 2022
A compelling tale of UK housing policy in the second half of the 20th century probably doesn't sound like a description of a book many people would want to read. Many people are often wrong though. Grenfell obviously looms large over this thought provoking book which does not offer easy or pat answers to the questions it raises. I was reminded of Francis Spufford's 'Light Perpetual' and Michael Nath's 'The Treatment' but for my money 'The Peckham Experiment' is a more fully realised work, possibly due to its very specific focus.
Profile Image for Paul.
2,230 reviews
February 13, 2023
Set over the course of a day, Charlie is reliving the life that he and his identical twin brother had from their working-class background and their participation in the radical Peckham Experiment. They lost their parents in the Second World War in a bombing raid.

They emerged blinking from the war with a desire to take the communist upbringing they had had into the new era. Their ideals were shattered when the tower block they were instrumental in building collapsed in 1968 causing a number of fatalities. The estate was then demolished in the mid-1980s and JJ’s life unravelled, he was a broken man.

And now he is dead.

It is now the day before the funeral and Charlie is trying to write the eulogy for, JJ. As he works his way through a bottle of brandy and shuffles around the house he unearths fragmentary memories of their past as he gets steadily more drunk on the spirit.

There were lots of things that I liked about this book. To begin with, this is a really well-done internal monologue by the main character. Even though it reaches back to 1930, it feels like a very contemporary book too as it is set at the time of the 2017 general election and the forced societal destruction being engineered by the Tories. It taught me some things about what had happened in the 1960s to a tower block, called Ronan Point when it partially collapsed in 1968, and that The Peckham Experiment was a real thing that took place between 1926 and 1950 when people actually cared how parts of society could look after themselves. Well worth reading. 3.5 stars
621 reviews5 followers
February 8, 2023
This is absolutely fantastic. It loops and spirals around, building up a deeply textured picture of a London life, and the voice that Ware has constructed is incredible - sly, joyful, sad, unrepentant, guilty, everything all at once and richly human. Housing policy doesn't seem a natural topic for a novel but while I was reading this I kept thinking, "Of course, of course this has to be written about," because with Charlie's (and Ware's) help it becomes more and more obvious throughout the novel how the various post-war housing policies led to the London, and the Britain, we have now. For better or worse, mostly worse. I'm so glad I picked this up.
Profile Image for Anne Goodwin.
Author 10 books64 followers
December 25, 2022
Fact-based novel about identical twins with conflicitng ideologies involved in post-war social housing from the 1950s drive to replace the slums to the 1990s Thatcher sell-out. I found the first-person rambling of the surviving twin alienating initially, but I'm glad I read on to learn about the politics and mechanics of the early tower blocks which, for different reasons (concrete then, cladding now) risk the lives of the poor.
29 reviews
February 27, 2023
A book that simultaneously takes place over 1 evening and across 85 years. It took me a while to get into as the narrator flips between present day and the past and isn’t particularly likeable as he’s alarmingly blunt. A third of the way in, I found myself hooked. Weaves an interesting personal narrative around the people who are (arguably) responsible for housing crisis. Particularly enjoyed it as it’s based around my neighbourhood and brought the past alive.
Profile Image for Clare.
541 reviews8 followers
April 27, 2023
Enjoyed the main character a lot. Less enamoured with the mix of reality and fiction in the housing stuff. And the disclaimer at the end saying any similarities to real people and situations is coincidental doesn’t make sense in a novel where real people and events are referred to throughout! Might have been a 4 but for that.
Profile Image for theo vengan.
162 reviews2 followers
April 8, 2023
‘We’re all living under a volcano, JJ. Any day now someone’s going to want to hang a picture up, they’re going to bang a nail into a wall and the wall’s going to fall out and we’re going to die.’
Profile Image for Frank Ware.
25 reviews
January 18, 2026
Yes Guy Ware is my dad, but I would have given this book five stars anyway
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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