302 pages, FeedaRead.com
Review by Bill Kirton
There are books you enjoy but
which then fade and there are books which stay with you. They may stay for
reasons of style, subject matter or because they touched a specific thread
which was important to you. Whatever the reason, though, if a book does stay
with you after you’ve finished it, the writer can congratulate him/herself on
having succeeded, so congratulations to Philip Paris for achieving that sort of
success with Men Cry Alone.
The theme of the novel –
partnerships in which men are abused by women – suggests that, in this case,
it’s the shock value of the content that makes its impact last. And it’s true
that Paris ’s
careful, studied treatment of the theme, the thoroughness of his research and the
sensitivity of his portrayal of the characters – ‘good’ and ‘bad’ – are all
very impressive. However, the real power of the book lies in the subtlety of
his analysis of the psychology behind the events and his insinuation that
extreme violence can be a feature of the most ‘ordinary’ relationships.
The inverted commas I’ve put
around ‘good’, ‘bad’ and ‘ordinary’ are there to show that each of these terms
needs to be questioned and, in this context, they don’t have the single moral
value that’s normally ascribed to them.
The book opens with a gentle
setting of context and an almost anecdotal approach to one of the main
characters, all so skilfully managed that the shocking event towards which it’s
moving is that much greater when it eventually does arrive. The reader doesn't
know it's coming but then, neither did the character, and so Paris has made quite a strong point right at
the outset. He’s set up a tension between the ordinariness of the everyday and
the unthinkable possibility of extreme, unsuspected violence.
Three separate stories are told,
each involving a couple in which the man is abused by the woman. Their
respective situations and ages allow Paris to suggest the spectrum of such
violence is broad: Alfred and Enid are in their 70s and have known and loved
each other for 60 years; Tom and Gemma have a young daughter; and Gordon and
Tania are childless. Structurally, having three distinct narrative threads is a
shrewd choice. In each, there are sequences which end with cliff-hangers,
whereupon the scene shifts to one of the other couples but rather than this
frustrating readers by leaving them in suspense, they’re transported to a
narrative point at which a previous cliff-hanger is about to be resolved.
For all three couples, we’re
given unadorned, ordinary settings peopled by characters unremarkable save for the fact that they are
abuser and abused. There are no stylistic flourishes, no fancy literary or
linguistic tricks, just a stripped chronicle of their days together and the
mixture of furies and quiet desperation that characterise their lives.
The book is about more than
abuse. It's about love, relationships, life. The little things we do
unconsciously every day which may seem trivial but which constitute our strength
and which, if broken or distorted, replace our previously reliable reality with
chaos and impotence. As you read and become involved with these characters, the
ordinariness of their lives strikes you, starts making you ask yourself
questions about morality, psychology, motives, relationships and how all these
things depend on the maintenance of really simple habits and routines.
Two of the abusers are unpleasant
characters, but they’re not monsters, and in each of the relationships, the
word ‘love’ is still a powerful part of the equation which holds them together.
This contributes to the bewilderment felt by both characters and reader. All in all, what’s being recorded is a tragic
but baffling phenomenon. We’re seeing people manipulate the little things of
life to plot against one another, use a child or the threat of suicide to
control a partner. The real shock is that such familiar, trivial things in the
most ordinary of circumstances can develop into something truly sinister.
This is an intelligent,
considered, sympathetic book which gives you three gripping stories and constantly
provokes you to reflect on the mysterious bonds which hold (or are supposed to
hold) people together.
Fabulous review that both informs and entices the prospective reader.
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