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Ebook323 pages5 hours
Vauxhall
Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars
2.5/5
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About this ebook
1970s London: Young Michael runs past the railway arches and terraces of Vauxhall. Reaching the street on which he lives, he witnesses a young girl fall from a window, her sari floating down behind her. Her lifeless body lies crumpled on the ground. This incident marks the beginning of a period in which Michael's life threatens to unravel. From his sister's taunts to a series of house fires, police harassment, his parents' crumbling marriage and the realisation that the council intends to clear out the slum he calls home, he learns to navigate his way through an array of obstacles, big and small. 'An extraordinary debut novel, Vauxhall tells a warm and hopeful story of a young boy and the city that surrounds him. A tenderly observed, fascinating portrait of a childhood in South London, as it moves from post-war darkness into an uncertain new era.' Blake Morrison, author of South of the River 'Only a poet could have written Vauxhall - clean, swift and with flashes of lightning' Bonnie Greer 'Immediately appealing, this is quite an odyssey through the maelstrom that London was in the 1970s. A remarkable achievement' Brian Chikwava
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Reviews for Vauxhall
Rating: 2.3 out of 5 stars
2.5/5
5 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This novel is narrated by Michael, a young boy living with his Nigerian father, Irish mother and siblings in Vauxhall, a former working class neighborhood in South London whose respectable council homes have become decrepit in the late 1960s and early 1970s. As the homes deteriorate so does the neighborhood, which is increasingly populated by poorer Londoners, homeless people, and immigrants of color who are denied housing in more desirable neighborhoods, and Michael's own life and that of his family also progressively unravel. The book takes the form of a series of events in Michael's life told through his eyes, in the rushed manner of a child excitedly telling his parents what happened in school that day. Unfortunately that style of storytelling, although an accurate reflection in the eyes of a young boy who doesn't understand what's happening to and around him, made it difficult for this reader to sympathize with the narrator, his family members, or the people in the neighborhood who entered and exited his life before I could get to know or understand them. Vauxhall is presumably an autobiographical novel, as its author is also of mixed Nigerian and Irish heritage and grew up in impoverished South London neighborhoods. The book is most effective when it describes the racial slights that Michael and his siblings experience, particularly when he and his siblings are out in public with their mother, who walks separately from them to avoid harassment of them or herself by those who disapprove of her having a black husband. Michael's mother is the most sympathetic character in the book, as she keeps the family together despite her own poor health, external pressure from her relatives and neighbors, and an often indifferent and unromantic husband.I found Vauxhall to be a mildly interesting but ultimately disappointing novel, as it could have been a far more interesting book had it been more reflective and less rushed, and if its potentially interesting characters had been better developed.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5I found this book very boring. Michael is growing up in London and they are about to have their home knocked down. I just found this book confusing and not very interesting.