The first chapter in this novel is quite startling. It's weird. OK…very weird. But keep going.
When everything starts to make sense, this is a somewhat eccentric, albeit charming, story of an unlikely friendship between Daniel, a 101-year-old man, and Elisabeth, a 32-year-
…more old woman. Best of all, they've been dedicated to one another since Elisabeth was eight years old and often left in his care by her party-loving and irresponsible single mother.
Written by Ali Smith, this finalist for the prestigious Booker Prize is a tale of friendship and love that is light on plot but filled with vivid characters. It's 2016. Daniel is in a nursing home, dying and slipping in and out of a deep sleep, and Elisabeth is the only one who regularly visits him. While the novel is primarily about Elisabeth's memories of their times together, it is also about the strife, anger, and political discord that envelops that summer and autumn of 2016 in England just after the Brexit vote was taken and politically split the country in two.
This is a literary novel that requires readers to pay attention and think. Some of the text is written in free form, even bordering on stream of consciousness. It is also rife with imagery, especially trees, which writers often use to represent life and growth. That is especially poignant in this book considering how and when Smith employs these images.
The life and paintings/collages of the only British female Pop artist, Pauline Boty, feature heavily in the book, which is quite a feat since the paintings are described in words without the actual images. Take a minute to Google these paintings/collages. It will make all the difference in your appreciation of the book.
In some important ways, the novel is the literary equivalent to Boty's rebellious and highly original artwork that juxtaposed disparate images together to create a startling whole. Just like the first chapter of this book. (less)