March 15, 2023
I mostly feel annoyed and manipulated by this book.
To be fair, I probably should have known not to venture near A Terrible Kindness given its mawkish appearance, but I was very intrigued by the mention of Aberfan.
Though neither I nor my parents were around for it, the Aberfan disaster has gone down in British history as an horrific tragedy quite unlike any other. For those who don't know, in 1966 a huge coal mine spoil tip collapsed down a hillside and engulfed a primary school where 109 children and 5 teachers were killed. Rescuers had to pull out the destroyed blackened bodies of children, many of whom had to be identified by scraps of clothing or a hairband.
It was horrific. And the blurb of A Terrible Kindness leans heavily on Aberfan, making you think this is historical fiction about the disaster. The truth is, however, that the book has very little to do with Aberfan and, instead, uses it as a dramatic backdrop for William to rethink his life and reminisce about his adolescence.
After the powerful beginning, we spend the rest of the book moving between William's past at boarding school and the present where something has happened to make him estranged from his mum. I did not find William's boarding school/choir boy adventures particularly interesting, so I was reading on only for the something that is teased throughout.
It all culminates in what I found to be a very anticlimactic-- and predictable, for that matter --scene.
The more I think about it, the more I struggle to see any reason why Aberfan needed to be part of this story. The fact that it is used and discarded as needed in order to attract readers to a rather dull story about a boy's dispute with his mother just feels wrong.
To be fair, I probably should have known not to venture near A Terrible Kindness given its mawkish appearance, but I was very intrigued by the mention of Aberfan.
Though neither I nor my parents were around for it, the Aberfan disaster has gone down in British history as an horrific tragedy quite unlike any other. For those who don't know, in 1966 a huge coal mine spoil tip collapsed down a hillside and engulfed a primary school where 109 children and 5 teachers were killed. Rescuers had to pull out the destroyed blackened bodies of children, many of whom had to be identified by scraps of clothing or a hairband.
It was horrific. And the blurb of A Terrible Kindness leans heavily on Aberfan, making you think this is historical fiction about the disaster. The truth is, however, that the book has very little to do with Aberfan and, instead, uses it as a dramatic backdrop for William to rethink his life and reminisce about his adolescence.
After the powerful beginning, we spend the rest of the book moving between William's past at boarding school and the present where something has happened to make him estranged from his mum. I did not find William's boarding school/choir boy adventures particularly interesting, so I was reading on only for the something that is teased throughout.
It all culminates in what I found to be a very anticlimactic-- and predictable, for that matter --scene.
The more I think about it, the more I struggle to see any reason why Aberfan needed to be part of this story. The fact that it is used and discarded as needed in order to attract readers to a rather dull story about a boy's dispute with his mother just feels wrong.