2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An excellent book , honest and optimistic, 24 Sep 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: The Year's Midnight (Paperback)
This is truely a great novel full of characters you can warm to and events you can believe. Although the use of strong Scottish dialect make it difficult to follow it is well worth sticking with and hey you mae well ken fits said to you next time your North of the border. The plot and narrative style are refreshingly strong and straight forward and the optimism and faith in the humanity of the characters tends to leave you with a warm glow and a feeling that all in this novel at least things tend to work to a fitting conclusion.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Criminally underrated debut from Scottish author, 12 Oct 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: The Year's Midnight (Paperback)
I cannot believe that nobody has reviewed this book before. It has the lot - believable characters, great plot, historical authenticity and interesting information about clocks (!) The author maintains superb narrative tension and the whole forms a hugely satisfying read that is far removed from the average British middle-class "ideas" novel. The book was underrated on its release and, judging by the fact that no one has reviewed Alex Benzie's latest effort, the same goes for that one too. I have just ordered it and hope for more of the same from a very promising author. Incidentally, I bought it for a friend for Christmas and she loved it too, so it's not just me!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Unusual, touching and humane - deserves to be better known!, 1 Mar 2004
This review is from: The Year's Midnight (Paperback)
This is a fine debut novel from a Scottish writer who has a lot more to say than many bigger, showier names I could mention. Perhaps the fact that it is historical and set in a country town (rather than the usual contemporary Urban Grimm school of Scottish fiction) has something to do with its relative neglect; but that's a poor excuse.
Benzie obviously knows his literature, and the opening historical pre-amble leading up to a hanging for sheep-stealing and the destruction of the town clock, owes something to the openings of Grassic Gibbon's "Sunset Song" and Halldor Laxness' "Independent People"; but it's still marvellous stuff in a thrillingly dark voice.
Thereafter, we get a touching and humane story featuring some very well realised characters - Watchie himself is a particularly likeable creation. The theme of clocks and the passage of time which runs through the book is skilfully handled. My only quibble (and it's a relatively minor one) is that the book, although actually fairly long on a straight page count, somehow feels too short on coming to the end - some loose ends have been left untied, and the novel's darker undercurrents could have been taken further. All the same, I'd recommend this to anyone.
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