Sunday, 11 August 2019

Engleby - disturbingly good

This book appears to be the memoir of Mike Engleby, initially focusing on his university days, during which he starts to become slightly obsessed with fellow student Jennifer. But when Jennifer disappears, he cannot quite understand what has happened and this part of his life starts to haunt him. As time passes, and Mike begins a career in journalism and meeting new people, he keeps on writing, but returns to his musings on Jennifer time and again. In each recollection, additional snippets of information are revealed about what Mike's relationship with her and others was really like ... or does it?  I would like to say that Engleby is a classic case of a novel featuring an unreliable narrator - which it is to a certain extent, but it is so much more. It delves into the disturbing tricks our minds can play on us and the differing images of ourselves - the variety of ones we present to other people, and the one we know to be our true self. But then again, do we ever really know our true self? What makes us who we are - nature or nurture or both? The reader starts to wonder whether we can trust anything Mike actually says? Is he a calculating liar, or a self-deluded monster? This is a disturbing book that never lets you feel settled. It is a fine example of contemporary story telling by Sebastian Faulks, an author who rarely disappoints. The narrative takes you in all directions and even now, I'm still musing over what really happened. A book that definitely gets into your head, and stays there long after you turn the last page!

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 342 print pages.
Formats: print, unabridged audio download, audio CD, ebook.
Price I paid: free, borrowed from husband.

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