The Mookse and the Gripes discussion

This topic is about
little scratch
The Goldsmiths Prize
>
2021 Goldsmiths Prize Shortlist - little scratch
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Hugh, Active moderator
(last edited Oct 14, 2021 01:47AM)
(new)
-
rated it 4 stars
Oct 06, 2021 12:15PM


reply
|
flag


I would really recommend both getting a paper copy and listening to the audio here as they are different and complementary experiences.

The second half of the novel didn't quite work for me - it felt like a short story, stretched thin, with an unsatisfying balance of the banal to the profound. That said, I really admired the novel's structure - "choreography of language" is exactly right! I am curious how the audio version compares.



“It was a strange thing to record as the text is so much about encouraging the reader to make decisions and learn patterns. Instead, it becomes a performance, but it still demands attention and, I think, works. I always heard it in a voice!”.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...




Just been listening to some of the audio (as that still works and I sold my paper copy) and I just realised this was rather appropriate.
One of the things little scratch plays with us autofiction / there us even I recall a WhatsApp group discussing it.
The narrator does share a lot in common with the author (for example working as an Assistant at a serious newspaper) but by no means everything
The character who is very consciously meant to point more towards the author (and is deliberately portrayed very sympathetically as Watson is having some fun with being able to make herself a likeable character) is actually the mint-tea/in-or-out colleague who we think suspects something of the truth of what happened to the narrator. And the narrator cannot actually remember her name but thinks it begins with R - she thinks of Rachel but is not sure that’s right.




Rebecca Watson has said that one of the reasons that she introduces the humour in the book is to make it easier to spend time with the narrator; whereas by contrast Natasha Brown has said on a number of occasions that the reason her book is so short is she could not believe anyone would be prepared to spend any longer in the narrator's head (given her passiveness).


https://www.newstatesman.com/culture/...
The stage play (which Gumble is going to see) sounds like a fascinating approach to the novel. Four actors simultaneously playing the narrator

Are the New Statesman backing away from the Prize.
Normally these are all in the weekly and print editions but they do not seem to be this year. And the Prize lecture is normally printed at some length as a major feature - no sign of it even online this year (although from what people have said that’s a good thing).
And with one of the authors (in her interview) and the chief judge attacking the Goldsmith itself it feels like odd times for the Prize.

One of the Goldsmith nominated authors and a Goldsmith judge attacked the Goldsmith? Do tell!
That Rebecca Watson interview made me wish I liked the book better. I’m with you, Linda, I struggle to rate a book based on my enjoyment of it while reading it or it’s importance. The discussion of sexual assault or rape is hugely important to discuss and how could a book about that be enjoyable? Although for me it wasn’t about how much I enjoyed the book as much as I thought the style would have worked much better if the book was shorter, it went on too long and got distracting.

And likely other judges/authors as well , I haven’t checked everyone’s public statements.

Shame about the cuts at Goldsmith. It seems the humanities still have to fight for respect as valuable to the human condition.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I liked little scratch, especially to begin with - I was wary that it would come across as too gimmicky, but actually I found myself drawn into the character's perspective. Perhaps the book went on a little too long, but I think it deserves its Goldsmiths nod.



Was this a one woman play? Tell us about it. I can easily believe that the play was excellent.