I’ve always loved Mike Gayle’s writing, if only for the fact that as a female version of chick-lit, which I suppose you would call bloke-lit, he writes characters that I have more in common with than many novels in the genre. He’s also, having worked as an agony uncle, very much in touch with men’s emotions, or what little of those emotions we tend to display, and his characters are a lot more realistic than many in the genre. So whilst my days of being in the search for love are well behind me, many of the experiences his characters go through were once a part of my life, enough to recall and feel some connection with his writing.
The “Mr. Commitment” of his second novel is Ben, better known as Duffy, who has been with his girlfriend Mel for 4 years, but they have never taken that extra step of moving in together or getting married. Instead, he lives with Dan, a fellow part-time stand-up comedian and works a temp job so that he can still take comedy gigs and work towards getting his big break. Duffy is happy with his lot, but Mel isn’t as after so much time together, she wants them to get married and whilst Duffy eventually accepts, he doesn’t do so without reservations and his reluctance is obvious enough that they split up. Duffy quickly realizes that he can’t live without Mel, but he needs to figure out if he wants to live with her enough to give her the commitment she wants.
Whilst I’m not like Duffy in some ways, having met my wife late in life and having the intention of marrying her quite early on in our relationship, other aspects of it certainly ring true. I’ve done any number of temporary and contracting jobs, liking the feeling of freedom that allows and I’ve also had certain other events in the story happen in my life as well. I’m a lot older than Duffy is in the novel, although given when the book was published, we’re around the same age and certainly my life at that age and Duffy’s weren’t wildly different, although I’m certainly not funny enough to have ever tried my hand at stand-up comedy. In that, I’m very much the kind of person who, as the old joke goes “wanted to be a wit, but only got halfway there”.
But this is what I love about Gayle’s writing; there is enough of me in there for it to feel realistic, sometimes horribly so. Duffy doesn’t swan around taking long lunches all the time and shopping all weekend like many chick-lit characters seem to, he snatches a sandwich at his desk, eats junk food at home and likes having control of the television remote control. Admittedly, there are a couple of moments that don’t seem entirely realistic, like the sub-plot with Alexa, but that sort of thing may happen all the time on the comedy circuit, as that’s the one part of the novel I couldn’t relate to as well as some of the others.
The dialogue is also spot on, with the conversations between Duffy and Dan and Charlie feeling quite natural for a group of guys who have been friends for a long time. The way Greg treats his fiancée is quite believable, if not terribly nice, but many of us will know someone like him and the way Dan feels when invited to his ex-girlfriend’s wedding is equally realistic, although the conversations at the wedding didn’t feel quite the same way, although I did enjoy the drunk aunt in those scenes. The best friend who doesn’t much like Duffy seems true to life, as do the events which have her and Duffy feeing the way they do about commitment. On the whole, with some exceptions, his characters are likeable and you look forward to seeing how things will turn out and whilst karma may be a little too active here compared to real life, the reader ends up engaged enough to care how things turn out.
The other beauty of Gayle’s writing along with the realism, is in the way he writes. It’s not just the dialogue which is spot on and often amusing, but his writing style is flowing, surprisingly fast-paced for a bloke-lit novel and simply written so as to be easily readable. This may be something else he picked up from his agony uncle days, as getting blokes to read relationship based novels probably isn’t all that easy and it needs to be pitched at a certain level to encourage them to pick it up.
What you get with Mike Gayle’s writing is something that is realistic, reads very quickly and writing where you may recognize yourself or people you know. This has always attracted me to his writing and there is nothing in “Mr. Commitment” that makes me like his work any less than I already did.