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Paperback Midnight All Day Book

ISBN: 0571194567

ISBN13: 9780571194568

Midnight All Day

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Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Good*

*Best Available: (ex-library)

$5.09
Almost Gone, Only 2 Left!

Book Overview

This anthology chronicles the many forms of crisis in contemporary relationships. All the stories proceed from a central premise: that we are unerring in our choice of lovers - especially when it... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Some high points, some lower

Midnight All Day is a collection of short stories by Hanif Kureishi, an author whose characters often approach the low life, usually without ever actually attaining it. These stories are of variable quality, ranging from excellent to rather mundane, though they are all eminently readable, well written and well constructed. Sometimes there's just a bit too much incestuous involvement with the media. There are just a few too many writers, actors, television and film people around. One can understand why the author might meet a number of such people, but repeated use of media settings does occasionally detract from his story telling. Despite this criticism, the characters are acutely drawn and are utterly credible. They tend to stumble or shamble through their lives from one opportunity to the next mistake, initiating and terminating relationships. Despite their tendency to write about or enact other characters, they often display very little facility for introspection. They often resort to their bottles or recreational drugs and treat sex as if it were a challenge. So the stories deal with late twentieth century British professional middle classes, whose careers are always on top until they are bust, whose fortunes are always up until they crash, and whose relationships are always idyllic until they are failed. Hanif Kureishi has a keen eye for the character of eighties and nineties Britain and on several occasions one feels implicitly that his subjects would not dream of discussing their woes with their parents. They are confident yet vulnerable, assertive yet indecisive, committed yet utterly ephemeral. There are occasions when these characteristics are a little overstated, but overall this is a moving and memorable collection which is probably best read one story at a time, rather than cover to cover.

Sustaining a love was bloody work

The main theme of these sad stories written in a minor key, is the conflict between freedom, love and family: 'his freedom to live and develop as he liked, against the right of his family to have his dependable presence.' The subjects of these stories are lonely, entangled in triangular relationships, lost, young but already burnt-out, disillusioned, emotionally afraid, or 'fighting to preserve oneself', for 'Love could be torn down in a minute like taking a stick to a spider's web.' In this world 'without certainties', two people talking is already 'the apogee of civilisation.' With cool, restrained sentences Hanif Kureishi evokes masterly 'the complexity and detail of inner motion.' Not to be missed.
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