Reviews

Elmet by Fiona Mozley

jarcher's review against another edition

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4.0

A slow-burning, quietly furious novel bubbling beneath beautiful prose. It's a short work but each word is selected so carefully that it feels like an epic.

aylincoolcat's review against another edition

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3.0

"Elmet" von Fiona Mozley weist viele Stärken, aber dann doch auch viele Schwächen auf.

Die Sprache ist ohne Frage schön, schlicht und zugänglich, die Figuren mal mehr mal weniger interessant und das Setting erst mysteriös und neu, und dann doch schnell auserzählt.

Der Plot war im Ansatz wirklich interessant, aber bis die Handlung in Fahrt kommt, gab viel zu viele beschreibende und rückblickende Passagen, die zwar schön zu lesen waren, die Geschichte aber irgendwie nicht vorangebracht haben.

Auch die Charaktere waren in ihren Grundzügen super spannend und die sich entwickelden Konstellationen boten viel Konfliktpotenzial, aber davon blieb ebenfalls vieles ungenutz und verlor sich irgendwo in der Erzählung.

Das mag zum einen daran liegen, dass den verarbeiteten Themen wie Klassenkampf, soziale Ungerechtigkeit und Naturverundenheit dann doch immer etwas an Dynamik und Provokation gefehlt. Zum anderen konnte mich 14-jährigen, sehr distanzierten und für sein Alter vielleicht etwas zu abgeklärten Erzähler nicht von seiner Geschichte überzeugen und man mag diese Distanz vielleicht schätzen, aber für mich darf es dann doch etwas mehr Emotionalität sein.


Lange hat mich kein Buch mehr so zwigespalten zurückgelassen, was die Bewertung angeht. Und trotz einem grandiosen Show-Down der mich schon fast an eine Szene aus einem Tarantino-Film hat denken lassen, fällt mein Urteil eher mittelmäßig aus. Für mich hätte sich der Roman etwas mehr festlegen können, entweder darauf, noch düsterer oder brutaler zu sein, oder aber darauf, die Milieustudie und die Gesellschaftskritik mehr in den Vordergrund zu stellen. So bleibt vieles nur angedeutet und unausgesprochen und letztendlich dann doch zu vage.

Ich lasse mich aber gerne auf Diskussionen zu diesem Buch ein, denn die bietet es definitv.

rageofachilles's review against another edition

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5.0

This is the second book in the last couple months that caught me completely by surprise, the other being Ian McGuire's [b:The North Water|29566038|The North Water|Ian McGuire|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1482849950l/29566038._SX50_.jpg|45489184]. By sheer coincidence both authors have a new book coming out this year. It is in that context, Mozley's new book, that people kept referring to how good Elmet was so I finally decided to take it from my shelf and give it a read.
The novel is set in Elmet, a region of England that I'm not very familiar with, the US equivalent might be the forests of Arkansas, or maybe Appalachia? The Guardian newspaper called it a noir book, and there's a hint of that. The tone of the book is definitely sharp and angular, but the book also has a great poetic quality to the language that's not verbose. I compare it to Jesse Ball's novels like [b:The Curfew|9888365|The Curfew|Jesse Ball|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1320557971l/9888365._SY75_.jpg|14780366], but Mozley succeeds where Ball fails. I love Ball's language. His characters, however, are often forgettable and underdeveloped, as if they exist to only serve the premise of the book. Here, the language is poetic and there are great characters. Daddy is hulking, lovable brute whose grizzled beard dominates the imagination of his children, and his daughter, Cathy, is a hellion, burning brightly and carry on her father's legacy. Much less defined is our narrator, Daniel. We know he likes books and has a different physique than his famous father. There's also a hint that he might be gender non-conforming.
I recommend this book for anyone who likes lyrical novels, who likes well developed characters, and anyone who likes authors that make readers work with the text, versus having everything spelled out on the page.

jenmulholland's review against another edition

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emotional tense medium-paced

3.5

sianynicole's review against another edition

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4.0

Beautifully written

aduqu's review against another edition

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dark reflective sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.0

This book started so slowly, before barrelling to it's conclusion like an out of control train.

It's haunting, however it dragged a bit with no clear plot at the beginning.

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mrpapillon's review against another edition

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dark tense medium-paced

3.5

alisonjfields's review against another edition

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4.0

7.4/10

Brutal, creepy, beautiful.

lattelibrarian's review against another edition

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5.0

Elmet was such a subtle, unexpected surprise.  It melds the topics of homesteading, gender, masculinity, femininity, capitalism, and community in ways that were so poignant and so well-woven.  Told through the perspective of Daniel, the youngest child, Elmet offers a unique insight to his world where there are two layers of understanding and interpretation: yours and Daniel's.  

It is lyrical, almost gothic, and so, so tender.  I feel like speaking more and in-depth about it would be to ruin its atmosphere, the context in which it lives.  But I will say that as the book grows longer, the plot shifts into something more insidious--the vices and virtues of a community come into question, especially as violence and murder become more of a threat.  

Overall, it's just absolutely wonderful and beautiful and soft.  

Review cross-listed here!

krobart's review against another edition

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4.0

See my review here:

https://whatmeread.wordpress.com/2020/04/20/review-1497-elmet/