Saturday 7 January 2017

Book Review: The Girls by Emma Cline





This book speaks of a world I found so horrifying and dangerous yet because it was told from the conscience and justifications of a 14 year old girl, I could almost find myself relating. For a debut novelist, Emma Cline has certainly demonstrated a fantastic grasp on verbalising the inner workings of the young female mind, so this was such an exciting find!

Fourteen-year-old Evie Boyd’s attention is caught by a gang of girls that live in her northern Californian town. With the “endless, formless summer” stretching ahead of her, Evie is seduced by a life spent amongst the girls in the out-of-town commune in which they inhabit. Cline’s story is based somewhat on the Manson cult, which I actually hadn’t heard of, but from a bit of Googling seems like a very big deal back in the 1960s. With Charles Manson at the centre, a large group of girls carried out gruesome murders with a pure kind of loyalty to their leader. Russell is the ‘Charles Manson’ in this tale, but Russell is consciously cast aside in order to focus on ‘the girls’.

Some criticism has been given to Emma Cline’s style of writing as there is a tendency to over-dramatise the insignificant; dresses “stuttering with loose stitching”, the “domestic rot of the kitchen sponge”. I found that this allowed me to more vividly and sharply imagine Evie’s world, with rich senses of colour and smell. Often these details were described when Evie was at home and feeling listless; the rush and roar of excitement for her new life had not yet come and she seemed to express disdain and boredom of the everyday.


I keep saying on this blog that I don’t really enjoy books that flick back and forth in time but once again, this one’s blown that out of the water. We experience older, grown up Evie’s life, as she narrates the tale. Her story as an adult is told with the same rich intensity. Sadly this Evie doesn’t seem to have made much of her life since the commune, and the very last passage in the book where she is walking on the beach almost willing the male passer-by to cause her harm suggests she is still an outsider desperate to be noticed. 

4/5

No comments:

Post a Comment