
After seven plays and four novels, all widely acclaimed, David Storey now presents a first-person account of certain incidents in the temporary life of Colin Freestone, a one-time professional boxer turned artist. On the occasion of his wife's breakdown, Freestone returns with her to her home town in the norther and takes a job in the local art school. Here we meet a whole gallery of startlingly realised teachers and students, presided over by David Storey's most comic creation to date, R. N. 'Skipper' Wilcox, a man who equates food with art, art with the past, and the past with his own idiosyncratic passions and vices. Then there are the Newmans who have arrived, ostensibly, to transform the town: Elizabeth, the wife, on the lookout for pleasure; Rebecca, the daughter, on the lookout for experience; and Neville Newman himself, a city planner, on the lookout, with his strange and menacing gang, for authority and power. Like some gigantic happening, unannounced, unrehearsed - convened perhaps, thought one is never sure, by Freestone himself - these characters, shadowed by the disturbing presence of Freestone's wife, trace out a compulsive and at times seemingly ungovernable pattern. By turns hilarious, tragic and shocking, the novel progresses towards a climax which both mirrors and transforms, like a work of art, the lives of everyone involved.
Colin Freestone, a former professional boxer turned artist, finds his life and marriage destabilized when he relocates to a northern town and encounters a volatile social circle. Freestone accepts a position at a local art school while navigating his wife's mental health crisis. He becomes the focal point for a series of interactions involving eccentric faculty, students, and the encroaching influence of the ambitious Newman family. The narrative is presented through a first-person perspective, capturing the shifting dynamics of the town as Freestone observes the unfolding events with a mix of detachment and involvement.
Readers and critics often note the author's ability to balance sharp, observational humor with underlying tones of tragedy. Discussion frequently centers on the vividness of the secondary characters, particularly the eccentric figure of Skipper Wilcox. The pacing is described as deliberate, allowing the reader to observe the slow accumulation of tension within the art school environment. Many highlight the novel's focus on the subjective nature of reality and the way the protagonist's artistic background influences his perception of the chaotic events around him.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
1978-01-01
Publisher:
Penguin Books
ISBN-10:
0140048618
ISBN-13:
9780140048612
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