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Up the Junction (Virago Modern Classics)
 
 
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Up the Junction (Virago Modern Classics) [Paperback]

Nell Dunn
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 112 pages
  • Publisher: Virago Press Ltd; New edition edition (14 April 1988)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0860689891
  • ISBN-13: 978-0860689898
  • Product Dimensions: 19.8 x 12.6 x 0.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 148,446 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Nell Dunn
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Product Description

Product Description

The girls - Rube, Lily and Sylvie - work at McCrindle's sweet factory during the week and on Saturday they go up the Junction in their clattering stilettos, think about new frocks on H.P., drink tea in the cafe, and talk about their boyfriends. In these uninhibited, spirited vignettes of young women's lives in the shabby parts of South London in the sixties, money is scarce and enjoyment to be grabbed while it can.

About the Author

Nell Dunn was born in 1936 and educated at a convent, which she left at the age of fourteen. She shot to fame with POOR COW (1967) and UP THE JUNCTION (1963), both of which became successful films. UP THE JUNCTION won the John Llewellyn Rhys prize.

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First Sentence
WE STAND, the three of us, me, Sylvie and Rube, pressed up against the saloon door, brown ales clutched in our hands. Read the first page
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
By Craobh Rua VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
"Up The Junction" was first published in the 1960s, and is set in south London - with most of the stories following a rather well-off central character (apparently called Lily), and her two friends Sylvie and Rube. Rube and Sylvie are from Battersea, while our heroine is from Chelsea - practically an heiress, is the eyes of her two friends. The girls work in McCrindle's sweet factory, barely keep their heads above water financially, and sqeeze everything they can out of their free time - going to the pub and whatever parties they can find, chasing the men, scamming clothes on the hp and trying to avoid their debts...even avoiding ex-husbands and praying they won't get pregnant

Although our Chelsea heiress is apparently married she spends quite a bit of time with Dave - who she meets in the pub in the first story. There wasn't much in the way of romance, or happy endings for the characters in the book and, as Dave reveals more of his thoughts as the book goes on, it left me a little sad how things turned out for him. (Admittedly, both Rube and Sylvie have their difficulties and they probably contributed more to the scandal, when the book was adapted for television). Dave has a slightly grubby past - he has occasionally been known to steal the odd car or turn over the odd tobacconist - but is a largely likeable character. He now lives in Roehampton, having been moved out of his former house in a slum clearance - it's still standing, and he calls in every once in a while. Marriage is something that has to be done sooner rather than later - there was little romantic about Dave's marriage, and it's something he says he shouldn't ever have done. He sees his friends rushing into marriage, before all "the best ones" get taken. His real love was driving, and Dave would have given anything to have earned a living as a racing driver. Early in the book, he says he had a friend who'd died in a motorbike accident, and that he's sticking to cars...though his love for speed subsequently proves a little too much.

The book's most likeable character, for me, was Sheila the hunchback - who, in the world where there isn't much spare, seems to have even less than most. Sheila works with the girls in McCrindle's sweet factory, and is known as 'Bent Sheil'. (There seems to be a certain amount of affection behind the nickname and Sheila does seem to value the friendships she has in the factory). She doesn't go to the dances, but sometimes she has a little luck at the cafe... out of all the characters I met in the book, it was Sheila I wanted the best for.

A short and easily read book - it's more a collection of short stories, mostly featuring the same characters, than a novel. Dunn keeps the focus on the conversations, and scene-setting is kept to a minimum. It is, however, a very sad book...anyone who has any hopes or dreams will only see them thwarted, rather than fulfilled.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Up the Junction is a slim novella detailing the exploits of a group of young girls working in South London during the 60s. The characters are not particularly well-defined: they tend to blur into each other and often it is impossible to tell who is doing or saying what. The first person narrator is particularly elusive and difficult to pin down and usually this would annoy me no end. However, this comes across as a deliberate choice and it seems to me that Dunn does not so much tell the story of these people but instead uses her characters to tell the story of a particular time and place in a series of interconnecting vignettes. The frequent bursts of song which appear throughout the novella help to fix this era in the mind of the reader. The characters aren't really characters at all, but are a means of producing statements and situations which reveal the harsh reality of life in 1960s South London, where times are hard and enjoyment is grasped with both hands and relished. The style reflects this, being bawdy, brash and full of life. Characters express such sentiments as `Why should we think ahead? What is there to think ahead to but growing old?' (p. 78) and `what you don't get caught for you're entitled to do` (p.85) and there is the constant feeling of wringing as much as you possibly can out of a life that is far from perfect.

There is a peculiar mix of free, modern attitudes and traditional values exhibited in this novella. On the one hand, the girls want sex, they want it outside the confines of marriage with whomever they choose and they want to enjoy it, but on the other they accept that they probably won't enjoy it and would rather suffer an illegal, painful and dangerous abortion than have a baby outside of wedlock, expecting a boy to marry them if they become pregnant. They drink brown ale, they smoke cigarettes and they tell filthy jokes. It's interesting to see the development here: these girls are not yet quite the Sex and the City girls, but they would like to be, and to make up for having to face harsh realities which aren't a part of glossy, glamorous twenty-first century New York living they are harder, tougher and earthier.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  3 reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Hard hitting. Made me understand the environment Punk Rock came from. 4 May 2006
By yasminkhan1959 - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
The previous reviewer has done an excellent job of describing the milieu in which the episodes take place. I say "episodes" because it's more like a video catching bits and pieces of the life. There's very little narrative interruption or comment.

Considering that Dunn had a background in journalism I approached the meaning of the episodes by considering the details and images she used. In each episode and in sum total they provide alot to consider and draw meaning from.

It's a very bleak view. But it really stayed with me. As a fan of Punk Music this book made me better understand what the Clash were singing about in 1977 or thereabouts when they had hits with "City of the Dead", "White Riot", and "White man at the Hammersmith Palais."
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
I never thought it would happen, with me and the girl from Clapham... 27 July 2008
By Craobh Rua - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
The book was first published in the 1960s, and is set in south London - with most of the stories following a rather well-off central character (apparently called Lily), and her two friends Sylvie and Rube. Rube and Sylvie are from Battersea, while our heroine is from Chelsea - practically an heiress, is the eyes of her two friends. The girls work in McCrindle's sweet factory, barely keep their heads above water financially, and sqeeze everything they can out of their free time - going to the pub and whatever parties they can find, chasing the men, scamming clothes on the hp and trying to avoid their debts...even avoiding ex-husbands and praying they won't get pregnant

Although our Chelsea heiress is apparently married she spends quite a bit of time with Dave - who she meets in the pub in the first story. There wasn't much in the way of romance, or happy endings for the characters in the book and, as Dave reveals more of his thoughts as the book goes on, it left me a little sad how things turned out for him. (Admittedly, both Rube and Sylvie have their difficulties and they probably contributed more to the scandal, when the book was adapted for television). Dave has a slightly grubby past - he has occasionally been known to steal the odd car or turn over the odd tobacconist - but is a largely likeable character. He now lives in Roehampton, having been moved out of his former house in a slum clearance - it's still standing, and he calls in every once in a while. Marriage is something that has to be done sooner rather than later - there was little romantic about Dave's marriage, and it's something he says he shouldn't ever have done. He sees his friends rushing into marriage, before all "the best ones" get taken. His real love was driving, and Dave would have given anything to have earned a living as a racing driver. Early in the book, he says he had a friend who'd died in a motorbike accident, and that he's sticking to cars...though his love for speed subsequently proves a little too much.

The book's most likeable character, for me, was Sheila the hunchback - who, in the world where there isn't much spare, seems to have even less than most. Sheila works with the girls in McCrindle's sweet factory, and is known as 'Bent Sheil'. (There seems to be a certain amount of affection behind the nickname and Sheila does seem to value the friendships she has in the factory). She doesn't go to the dances, but sometimes she has a little luck at the cafe... out of all the characters I met in the book, it was Sheila I wanted the best for.

A short and easily read book - it's more a collection of short stories, mostly featuring the same characters, than a novel. Dunn keeps the focus on the conversations, and scene-setting is kept to a minimum. It is, however, a very sad book...anyone who has any hopes or dreams will only see them thwarted, rather than fulfilled.
Not my favorite required reading for a course, though not the worst 27 Jan 2011
By Julian J. Stimach - Published on Amazon.com
I had to read this book for an English class centered around British culture over the past 60 years. Up the Junction is a true-to-life (I'm pretty sure, anyway) account of young residents of a poor area called Battersea during what I think I remember being the late 50s or early 60s. It's certainly an informative and enlightening account, but it's not the book you want to read if you're looking for rich character exposition and development or a well-structured plot, because this book has neither. It is a VERY true-to-life adaptation of random individuals the author met, most of whom drift in and out of the book's focus and in my opinion it is often difficult to keep track of who's whom. Really, unless this is assigned reading for a class, I don't recommend it because without knowing enough about the cultural context it is likely to be a confusing waste of your time.
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