09/06/2007
`The White Room' by Martyn Waites
Martyn Waites follows on from the highly successful `Born Under Punches' with a work of similar sonority that is written with his same infectious style. `The White Room' is a tale of raw, brutal lives in post-war Newcastle which seizes the mood of a city suffering from a lack of identity in the years following World War II. Although the synopsis is slightly mis-leading the novel is another book that has twists and turns at every corner and like his previous novel leads to a crescendo of crude, gripping sub-plots which leaves no taboo subject untouched. It reads like a cross between some of Elmore Leonard's early work (such as Swag) and has the same raw, untouched realism of the film `Get Carter'. It paints a picture of tough urban life in a hard city and Waite's' again hits home the harsh message of making the best of situations without hope. It focuses on half a dozen characters (which epitomise the people of a region struggling to cope in post-war North-East England) and quickly flits between their plights to result in an action filled finale which is as violent as it is compelling. All in all, a gripping read, and although not quite as punchy as his debut novel, it is still a thrilling piece of work.
6 out of 10, ****
By Andy Edgeworth