August 21, 2024 · 6:25 pm
The Bee Sting by Paul Murray was shortlisted for the Booker Prize last year and is even more impressive than his second novel Skippy Dies which I read last year. It is a portrait of the Barnes family who live in a small Irish town and have fallen on hard times following the financial crash in 2008. Dickie Barnes runs a car dealership which he inherited from his father Maurice. His marriage to town beauty Imelda is also in trouble. Their teenage daughter Cass is aiming to go to Trinity College Dublin and their 12-year-old son PJ is obsessed with video games.
As demonstrated in ‘Skippy Dies’, Murray is excellent at writing accurate teenage dialogue, although I was a bit less convinced by the absence of punctuation in Imelda’s section, which supposedly reflects her desperation and how her mind works. ‘The Bee Sting’ is less comic than ‘Skippy Dies’ and much more about anxiety regarding both the past and the future. The lengthy flashbacks eventually reveal that it is the events, decisions and near misses in Dickie and Imelda’s past which have really shaped the family’s current circumstances, leading to an unsettling but fitting conclusion. ‘The Bee Sting’ is an ambitious novel with satisfying character development.
My Family: The Memoir by David Baddiel is based on the comedian’s West End show about his parents and early life growing up in north London in the 1970s. His mother Sarah had an affair with a man called David White for around 30 years which she barely concealed from her children and saw her develop an eccentric obsession with golfing memorabilia. His father Colin was diagnosed with Pick’s disease, a form of dementia, before his death in 2022.
Baddiel seamlessly discusses painful and traumatic subjects alongside patently ridiculous ones without trivialising any of them. The most remarkable thing about ‘My Family’ is how Baddiel celebrates his parents’ uniqueness and humanity, despite recognising how emotionally damaged they were. Baddiel acknowledges that his relentless pursuit of being truthful and spending a lot of time in therapy might be why his portrayal of his parents is a lot more affectionate and non-judgemental than might be expected. There are dozens of photographs which aid a lot of visual comedy particularly where golf is concerned, so I don’t think ‘My Family’ would be quite as effective as an audiobook, but it is an outstanding memoir which is impeccably balanced between empathy and humour.
Filed under Books