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Ashley
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Mar 01, 2014 06:54AM

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I saw Barker and Glade as tragic, trapped by their own destiny, for want of a better word. I sympathised with them in so far as I wanted Barker to redeem himself (which I suppose he does in a way) and Glade to grow a spine (unlikely though that increasingly becomes). I wanted these things to happen, and I tried to ignore the fact that they clearly wouldn't.
Jimmy was similar, though I found him even harder to like. He's far easier to blame for his actions. I liked the ending though, the uncertainty of it. Now and then I'll be wondering what might have become of him, which is something I like to get from a novel.
I loved the prose, I thought there was a lot of detail for such a short novel. I expect that the reader could (if they were sad enough and had too much time on their hands) visit all the locations, and retrace the routes between them. I admire this, although it also slightly irritated me because I could feel Thomson looking for places to set the book, maybe sitting across the road in a cafe writing the scene that I was reading. This image kept intruding, which I did not like - as if I was watching a film and the director kept walking into shot.