Afbeelding van de auteur.

Ewan Morrison

Auteur van How to Survive Everything

9 Werken 186 Leden 7 Besprekingen

Over de Auteur

Bevat de naam: Ewan Morrison

Werken van Ewan Morrison

How to Survive Everything (2021) 48 exemplaren
Swung (2007) 46 exemplaren
The Last Book You Read (2005) 23 exemplaren
Distance (2008) 20 exemplaren
Tales from the Mall (2012) 17 exemplaren
Nina X (2019) 15 exemplaren
Ménage (2009) 8 exemplaren
Close Your Eyes (2012) 8 exemplaren
Nathan Coley (2017) 1 exemplaar

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Geboortedatum
1970
Geslacht
male
Nationaliteit
Scotland
UK
Woonplaatsen
Glasgow, Scotland, UK

Leden

Besprekingen

Well, Ewan Morrison's novel, How to Survive Everything kept me glued to the couch on a rainy weekend!

Haley and her younger brother Ben have been kidnapped by their (non-custodial) father who is determined to shield them from the next pandemic, at a remote, off the radar location. It is Haley's voice and point of view that drives the book.

Is their father delusional or is he a canny harbinger of the truth? He's written a manual to follow, for just about anything that could occur. Almost. And it is this treatise that Haley refers to with every event, occurrence, interaction that takes place in the compound. But there's not an answer for everything that transpires.

I quite like dystopian tales and I found the physicalities of Morrison's setting to be intriguing. The idealism and regimen that the members try to live by and follow start to take their toll as the book progresses. Are they delusional? Or far seeing?

Wound into the tale is the unpredictable factor - people. There are others inside the gates as well. The dynamics of a small society cannot be predicted. I loved Haley's recounting. She's torn between her beliefs and what her father is telling her, her burgeoning attraction to one of the other residents, her love for her mother and more.

How to Survive Everything was a page turner for me. I couldn't wait to read the ending, to find the answers for the questions I had. And I did - but certainly not what I imagined.

This was a five star read for me. But perhaps not one for gentle readers.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Twink | Dec 1, 2022 |
‘Nina is twenty-eight years old and this is Nina’s second day of freedom…’

Based on the real-life story of Katy Morgan-Davies and the so-called Lambeth slavery case, Ewan Morrison has created an intriguing and moving novel. It reminded me of a mix of Mark Haddon’s ‘Curious Incident’, with its childlike view of the world something akin to an autistic view, and Emma Donoghue’s ‘Room’, which is much more related in terms of subject matter. I don’t know the ins and outs of how much Morrison has consent to write Katy’s story, or if he has met the original Katy, so this is not the place to discuss exploitation or manipulation. For me, it didn’t come across as either.

The novel’s structure is split between Nina as a child - known simply as The Project, trapped in a Marxist-Leninist cult led by Comrade Chen – and the older woman who has now escaped the cult and is trying to fit into a society whose rules and routines are totally alien to her. The cult has tried to literally beat the notion of individuality out of Nina, and the book plays on her referring to herself in the third-person, erasing and deleting references to herself as ‘I’ in her diary entries from her childhood. It takes some getting used to as a reader, and at times it verges on the annoying when the author uses different colour of type to indicate thoughts and words to be erased. I understand why he has chosen to do this, but it could be accused of simply being a gimmick. To be honest, I’m on the fence about that one.

Where the book succeeds is creating a naïve, childlike perspective of horrific events: abuse, rape, violence, brainwashing and death. And as Nina is caught up in the social work system as an adult, and the trappings of modern life – journalists and ‘no win no fee’ solicitors, medical and psychological tests, the benefit system, sheltered housing – her life in the ‘real world’ comes to be as much of an ordeal as her life in the cult. Whether it was intended to be, the book turns out to be a quite damning indictment of the system designed to protect the vulnerable in our society.

However, it is not unremittingly bleak; there are obvious opportunities for comedy as Nina comes to terms with modern life (TV, supermarkets, mobile phones, etc) and there is genuine compassion in some of the individuals who try to help her, Sonia and Cas in particular. It becomes, somehow, a coming-of-age story as 28-year old Nina starts to live her new life, and learns to come to terms with what her recovered memories of her life in the cult actually mean.

A rewarding read, if at times a little harrowing, that ends with some sort of positivity and hope for the future. 4 stars from me.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Alan.M | Apr 16, 2019 |
This book really didn't work for me and I couldn't really relate to Alice or David to muster much of an interest in their pretty dysfunctional relationship.
½
 
Gemarkeerd
mari_reads | Mar 14, 2017 |
There were some cracking good stories in this book and I thought that the non-fiction sections, in particular, stood out in terms of sheer quality. However, there were also some simply dire stories as well as a fair few completely forgettable ones.

It was very much a mixed bag, and while I'm glad I read it, I can't say it's one I'd bother re-visiting.
 
Gemarkeerd
polkadotshark | 2 andere besprekingen | Apr 5, 2013 |

Prijzen

Misschien vindt je deze ook leuk

Statistieken

Werken
9
Leden
186
Populariteit
#116,758
Waardering
3.1
Besprekingen
7
ISBNs
28
Talen
3

Tabellen & Grafieken