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24 for 3 [Paperback]

Jennie Walker
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 128 pages
  • Publisher: CB editions (Nov 2007)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0955728509
  • ISBN-13: 978-0955728501
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,981,360 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Jennie Walker
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Product Description

Review

'24 for 3 contains some of the tightest, cleanest writing I have seen in a long time This is a little marvel. It's funny, clever, illuminating, deeply kind-hearted and it doesn't overstay its welcome. It's not self-indulgent: things happen in it, surprising things, like in an old-fashioned novel, yet it's perfectly contemporary; and every word has been chosen with subtle care' Nicholas Lezard, Guardian 'Exceptionally intellectually nimble as well as freshly expressed [Walker] is a very fine poet and it shows' Susannah Clapp, BBC Radio 4 Saturday Review 'This is such a gem. I wish I'd written it' Suzannah Dunn 'Read 24 for 3. Give it to smart friends, dull ones, brainy and dense ones; leave it on the train instead of a newspaper. I hope it outsells Alan Bennett's delightful squib, The Uncommon Reader, because it achieves the hardest thing in fiction: joy from difficulty, while maintaining a sense of unforced truth' Spectator --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Description

Do cricketers blush? What happens if the ball hits a seagull? Can a woman have a lover and a husband and still keep her family together? Can the rules be changed? Friday: as a Test match between England and India begins, a woman's attention is torn between a husband who is all too keen to explain the rules, a lover who prefers mystery, and a sixteen-year-old son who hasn't come home. By Tuesday night the match will have been won or lost. Or perhaps it will have reached a draw in which only pride may be salvaged? 24 for 3 is a perfectly crafted, funny and moving masterpiece about love, family, passion and whether or not one should play by the rules. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
This book is not really about cricket. The match and the attempt to explain the rules give the story a strong sense of time and place as well as of contrasted ways of seeing events. The summer, the park, the house, and its rooms, and the other room, make boundaries of the ordinary in which things are going on, which threaten to shake apart lives that have grown together. The writing is personal, intimate, yet almost matter-of-fact in an English way. The relationships (the husband and wife, the wife and lover, the mother and son, the au-pair) are shown through activities that are real and intense. You get a strong sense of people living together, but, like the au-pair, from different cultures, operating under different rules. And although it could have been depressing, after all it's about a family breaking up, it is actually humorous, warm and positive. Since in fact it was written by a man, but told by a woman, I wonder if women like it, find it convincing?
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By Archana
Format:Paperback
This short book just skips along, throwing surprises at you along the way - smiles in the mind, thoughtful observations, wry questions, vivid pictures. It's written with panache and a lightness of touch that belie the complexity of storytelling. It's no surprise to learn that the author is also a poet - her vision is intense and her language is honed.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful
A Pefect Cover Drive 25 July 2010
Format:Hardcover
In a week which has seen the Aussies humbled at Headingly (somewhere they have been humbled before) and Murali get his 800th wicket with his last ball ball in test cricket, taking the final Indian wicket in a famous Sri Lankan victory at Galle, what serendipity to find a novel, described in the blurb as "...a perfectly crafted, bittersweet and bewiching story about love, family, passion and whether or not one should always play by the rules."

It's the cricket novel with an opening of pefect pitch and length:

"Five days?" (The opening sentence - and indeed paragraph - of a novel which starts on the first Friday of a Test match between England and India.)

The title is original. Thus it is unlike a recently published book which disappointingly turned out to be neither a novel - though appropriating its title from one, with the content showing similarities to a roman-a-clef - nor about cricket: Peter Mandelson's "The Third Man". Mandy turns out to have spent much of his time as an unofficial umpire rather than patrolling the boundary, only occasionally given spells in the bowling attack. And while Milly-Molly has come in for harsh criticism, Jennie Walker's novel won the McKitterick Prize in 2008. The front cover sports a hat-trick of encomia:

"This is a little marvel" - Nicholas Lezard
"Very original. I loved it" - Mick Jagger
"A gem" - Salley Vickers

As a reader whose purchases are often influenced by covers, blurb and testimonials, I can only say - like Greg Wallace about a delicious Masterchef dish: " This is as good as it gets".

The novel has further exceptional qualities. A central character is a randy loss-adjuster who, like the first person narrator, has been attending a conference (but a different one) in Edinburgh: "The loss-adjuster's smile is not sheepish. It's goatish." (p 135). It sneaks in quotations from Chekhov's account of journeying towards Ostrov Sakhalin. On the infolded back blurb there is a final unexpected twist. This novel is a "doosra", as cross-engendered as "Middlemarch", though far shorter: one ball to an over or a Twenty-Twenty afternoon read compared to the five days attention George Eliot demands. Charles Boyle (when he writes for his poetic muse) has hit a perfect cover drive.
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