NOT Pynch - Milkman!

Laura Kelber laurakelber at gmail.com
Mon Feb 11 10:08:37 CST 2019


Thanks for the rave review, Becky. It's moved up on my list. I'll report
back to you when I've read it.

Laura

On Mon, Feb 11, 2019, 11:01 AM Becky Lindroos <bekah0176 at sbcglobal.net
wrote:

> Did I mention here that Milkman by Anna Burns (the 2018 Booker Prize
> winner) is brilliant?  I’m rereading it and want to have yet another go,  a
> 3rd reading.  It’s subversive somewhat experimental, maybe a bit
> allegorical.  The language is inventive and spot-on. There’s a huge
> feminist aspect to it.
>
> Thematically it’s about tribalism in troubled times and the dangers of NOT
> openly taking sides for any reason and the rumors, assumptions and gossipy
> consequences of trying that.  It’s also about the use of power, oppression,
> identity, surveillance and resistance from outside the tribe as well as
> within it.  It’s about the place of individuality and feminism in times of
> upheaval - dangerous - kind of forbidden.
>
> The setting is Belfast during the tumultuous 1970s,  but that’s never
> stated because it’s obvious. The characters are also unnamed for several
> good reasons - number one is that secrets abound in this paranoid time and
> place.  The absence of names also helps to establish the distance needed
> for a lightly allegorical aspect.  And by not naming them,  individuals are
> reduced to their “place” and “relationships,” like “middle sister” or
> “maybe-boyfriend” or maybe their groups “wee sisters.”
>
> I think maybe especially the women here would like it but, given the
> nature of the group,  I think everyone might.
>
> Has anyone read it already?
>
> Becky
> https://beckylindroos.wordpress.com
>
> --
> Pynchon-L: https://waste.org/mailman/listinfo/pynchon-l
>


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