PD Smith

Cynics and Monsters

07 August 2012 | fiction, Reviewing, TLS | Post a comment

“Arrival frames many of our expe­ri­ences of the city: the rou­tine arrival of the com­muter each day, the excite­ment of the tourist at that first glimpse of the metrop­o­lis, the anx­i­ety of the migrant – a stranger in a strange city. Sam Thompson’s Com­mu­nion Town begins with an appeal to a migrant, Ulya, from a face­less offi­cial who has been secret­ly observ­ing her and her hus­band, ever since they arrived in the city. He tells Ulya that he just wants her to open up, to con­fess her true feel­ings. Think of it as your “true arrival in the city,” he says. But the words of this sin­is­ter, Kafkaesque nar­ra­tor ring false. It smells like a trap.”

My review of Sam Thomp­son’s nov­el Com­mu­nion Town: A City in Ten Chap­ters, which has been long-list­ed for the Book­er Prize, appeared in the TLS last week. You can read it here.

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