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Jon McGregor: If Nobody Speaks Of Remarkable Things

theoptimist

New Member
Has anyone read this?

I'm over half-way through it and so far, I think it is brilliant! I want to savour every last word and I really don't want it to end. I'm attached to the characters and I find McGregor's use of vocabulary to be wonderful. It really is like poetry!
 
Sorry optimist, I've never heard of it. What genre is it?
Tell me a little about it, I might check it out....
 
Choc said:
Sorry optimist, I've never heard of it. What genre is it?
Tell me a little about it, I might check it out....
I'd class it as contemporary fiction.

It's Jon McGregor's debut about a street in the North of England, ordinary people doing everyday things until a terrible event happens and anyone who witnesses it will never be the same again. :eek:

I have about 60 pages left, I've been delaying reading it - it really is that good!
 
From Amazon.com:

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
McGregor's poignant, Booker-nominated debut examines in loving detail a day in the lives of the inhabitants of a single British block. It is a day like any other-a woman prepares breakfast for her family, boys play cricket, a man washes his car-until a terrible accident occurs, which is witnessed by all the neighbors but concealed from readers until the novel's end. Drifting from apartment to house to yard, McGregor reveals the stories found in each: there is the couple who fight bitterly and have brilliant sex; the man with hands scarred from trying, unsuccessfully, to save his wife from a fire; the aging veteran keeping from his wife the truth of his imminent demise. Weaving through these tales of the transcendental ordinary is the first-person narrative of a girl coming to terms with her unexpected pregnancy after a one-night stand. Her lover's twin brother arrives to drive her to her parents, but doesn't tell her the truth about his brother's absence; the girl's mother has her own secrets. McGregor's rapt attention to the exquisiteness of daily life sometimes makes his details ring falsely portentous, and his unwavering focus on minutiae-rain, traffic lights-can be wearying. But as the man with the scarred hands remarks, "there are many things you could miss if you are not paying careful attention. There are remarkable things all the time." This is the guiding principle of McGregor's novel, one that requires patience but yields ample rewards.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
*Starred Review* Nominated for the Booker Prize, this first novel has two narratives: first, there's the story of a single day in the lives of the residents of one street somewhere in England, from an old man struggling to tell his wife that he is dying to an eccentric young man who collects errata from the street and burns with unrequited love for one of his neighbors. The second story follows the aforementioned beloved young woman years later, after she learns she is pregnant. From the beginning, it's obvious that an accident happened on the street toward the end of the day, but we don't actually see the accident until near the end, and the two stories each inch closer to the moment. McGregor creates characters that brim with life and substance through exquisitely detailed descriptions of their lives and memories. But remarkably, almost no one has a name. Instead, the characters are known by their traits ("the man with the burnt hands," "the boy with the yellow sunglasses"), exposing both the disconnection and the unspoken intimacy between neighbors. A wonderful evocation of the beauty and horror of the literally everyday. John Green
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
 
AquaBlue said:
I have added the novel to my book list. Thanks!
Good stuff! Let me know what you think when you get round to reading it. I saw your huge list of books to be read. It might be some time :p
 
This does sound good; I think I'll add it to my wish list too. Thanks for bringing it to our attention!
 
I started it last year and gave up about 30 pages into it. I don't think that it was the books fault, I seem to have had a whole run of books that I've given up on in the past year, it's very frustrating.

You've encouraged me to go back to it though and I WILL stick with it!

Thanks!
 
lilbiteb said:
You've encouraged me to go back to it though and I WILL stick with it!

I highly recommend that you do! It's one of those books that stay with you long after you've read it! It's even worthy of a re-read!

The ending is fabulous, it's worth sticking with just for that!

I'm glad I've influenced a few members to add this to their 'to read' lists! I hope you all enjoy it as much as I did!
 
So did any of you guys end up reading it? I'm about halfway through and I'm loving it. McGegor manages to make the average lives of a block full of people so intriguing, yet entirely realistic. I love the uncertainty, and the possibilities, that results from his way of only convering part of the story. It also makes it more realistic - generally when we think of events, we don't remember the whole sequence of events at once.

I've even drawn a wee map of the street to figure out where all these people live in relation to one another. I'm really that into it :cool:
 
I thought this book was fabulous. It was one of the ones where you put it down when you're finished and go, "wow!".
 
It is so good, I've had to stop myself from finishing it. I'm almost at the end.
Every word is perfect and beautiful. Every character is real and lovable. You live in that northern street, watching it all unfurl.

I'm off to read the end now.
 
It sounds like a good one. (And I haven't even checked the list, in case certain ears are listening. :cool: )
 
I've finished it now. I want everyone to read it. I want everyone to talk about it. Everyone should talk about remarkable things.
 
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