Gordon Burn's final book Born Yesterday (he died in July 2009), is about as good a tribute to its author as you could get. It is a strange book, for at first glance it does not appear to be fiction at all, more like a rolling news review of 2007. Burn covers many of the major news events of the year, including the abduction of Madeleine McCann, terror attacks at Glasgow airport, Gordon Brown's succession from Tony Blair, the catastrophic flooding that affected great areas of the country. All these stories are interleaved throughout the book, but as you read them you realise that this is not journalism at all.
After the first couple of chapters, you realise that Burn is creating something new by looking at the connections between all the stories and the way they all interact with each other. Before long, the reader gets drawn into the conflation of real-life news events and sees that there really is a bigger picture, that in fact much of this so called "news" only really exists because of and through the media. Age-old stories are being told and re-created, and new myths are called into being but how much to they rely on "facts" and how much does the story exist because of itself.
Burn discovers linking themes in the news (the way the media created a picture of Kate McCann as a cold, unfeeling woman, somehow devoid of normal emotions, almost an "android". The focus on eyes in a sort of mythical way (Gordon Brown's loss of an eye, Madeleine McCann unusual "flaw" in her iris), the homo-erotic side of Blair's government.
By the end of the book, I was reminded (as I need to be reminded again and again) that the media creates the news. Or rather it takes a news item and turns it into a story, just as much a work of fiction as any novel. The bones of this book are the hard facts of "what really happened" but it is a work of fiction because it assembles a larger myth from the many smaller myths that were created on television and in the press.
The Guardian reports in his obituary the Burn said that, "the idea was to find a story, and the moment the news explosion happened to go there and write about it, turn it into a novel in the way that happens all the time through rolling news, newspapers, blogging". The novel was written in just one month, in an attempt to publish it while the news was still fresh in people's mind. Burn's editor at Faber, Lee Brackstone said that, "Born Yesterday was "an experiment as brave as anything attempted by Pound, BS Johnson, or Foster Wallace".
Born Yesterday is certainly a unique creation, crossing the border between fact and fiction and showing the impossibility of being certain where the boundary is. It will be of interest to anyone who follows current affairs with more than a passing glance and will definitely serve as a reminder that nothing is quite what it seems.