Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Connections

I'm now on part three of Darkmans by Nicola Barker and I think it would be interesting to make some connections to the text.

For one thing, the fact that Kane is a prescription drug dealer connects to our society today, in the way that lots of people do prescription drugs instead of nonprescription drugs because they are more easily accessed and can give similar effects. I think it also says something about Kane, in the way that yes, he is a drug dealer, which would seem pretty hard core, except for that they're prescription drugs, which somehow makes him seem more pathetic. Either way it is a modern twist on your average drug dealer character, showing us how really anyone can be involved in the business.

A text to text or other media connection is Fleet. The troubled or special child seems to be a common theme in film and literature today. Many of the books I have read in the past year feature children similar to Fleet in this way, like Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer, and The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime by Mark Haddon. In horror films it is used as a creepy factor, a child who is smarter than they should be, or knows things they shouldn't. It seems to be a combination of these two in Darkmans, because Fleet is both troubled and strangely knowledgeable.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Darkmans part two

I finished chapters one through eight, which was part one of Darkmans by Nicola Barker. I think it would be good to sum up the characters that were introduced in this first section so as not to get confused, now that more characters are being introduced in part two, even though the style of writing makes it easy to get to know the characters. Just for future reference:

Beede is a mature adult who has an obsession with history and order and pride. He likes to manipulate words and sometimes people, but is, at least in Kane's mind, simple and not worth investigating for the most part.
Kane is Beede's son, a prescription drug dealer, who is not into emotions, and who enjoys living life in the shallow waters. He smokes cigarettes and marijuana and lives in the same building as his father, who always keeps his door unlocked as a fatherly act, even though, until now, Kane has never taken advantage of that.
Kelly is Kane's ex girlfriend who seems to still be involved somehow with Beede. Kelly's family is very well known for various things, like being rich and mischievous. She breaks her leg and Beede visits her in the hospital. Their relationship is something to watch.
Gaffar is a Turkish man who helps Kelly when she breaks her leg and gets in a fight with Kane, who thought he was harassing Kelly. He understands english but doesn't speak it very well, so fills in everything else with Turkish, so no one but Beede understands him.
Elen and Fleet. Elen is Fleet's mother, and Beede's chiropodist, which is some sort of foot doctor. They have a way more intense relationship than the average doctor/patient sort, which seems to be the case with Beede and whoever he encounters.
Isidore is Elen's husband and Fleet's father, and has some mental issues with periods of time where he forgets many things, like who he is, and does things he normally wouldn't. Beede acts as his caretaker sometimes, and Fleet seems to have learned or inherited some of these eccentricities from him, much to his parents displeasure.

So those were the main characters from part one. I'm pretty sure all of them are still going to be in the rest of the book, I just want to remember their specifics so when new ones are added it doesn't get confusing.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Chapter One

The book I am reading right now is Darkmans by Nicola Barker. I've just finished chapter one. I would like to examine a quote to learn more about Kane and a certain situation with a two men on one horse.

"Outside the horse was still vaguely audible as it moved around in the car park. While Beede continued to search through his bag, Kane strolled over to the window, pulled the curtain back and peered out. The horse was still visible, but way off to his left. It had come to a halt in the children's play area, where it stood, breathing heavily and defecating. The man was now struggling to climb off its back. But it was an entirely different man.
Kane blinked.
Entirely different. Tall. Nordic. Smartly dressed in some kind of uniform --

Imposter " (27).

It's strange enough that there was a random man bareback on a horse outside the restaurant window in the first place, but now the man has mysteriously disappeared and been replaced by a new, different, man. The first clue that the man was not the same was that he was struggling to get off the horse's back. The original had ridden the horse with grace and confidence, this one seems less comfortable on the creature's back. Next Kane realizes his obvious appearance is different as well and for some reason this greatly shocks and disturbs him. Why is he seeing this man on the horse in the first place, when no one else notices it and only the little boy seems to entertain the idea, or even listen to what he's saying about it? The little boy certainly does seem to know more than an average five year old would. Almost as if he is a part of this realm where the men on the horse are an every day sight, and Kane is just becoming able to experience it. Sort of like in Harry Potter when Harry can suddenly see the dragon horses that pull the chariots to Hogwarts, because he saw Cedric die. Which doesn't even make sense because he saw Sirius die, and if that doesn't count then Sirius isn't really dead. But the series is over. But this isn't the point. Back to Darkmans. I wonder if there is some mysterious aspects of life that Kane is suddenly becoming aware of. He says he feels differently, and he doesn't seem to be enjoying this change.
I think his comment of 'Imposter' is interesting. Imposter has connotative associations such as liar, fake, a bad thing, a cruel trick, being deceived, betrayed by something or someone you trusted. He feels so strongly about this horse and these men that this is the word that comes to mind when the second man is on the horse, the first absent. Would the second even be the imposter? Maybe the first was the imposter, and he doesn't realize it. Or maybe, like the boy suggests, there really were two horses, so neither is an imposter. Either way the whole scenario is rather curious and I hope more light is shed upon this, both for my sake, as well as Kane's.