What is especially interesting about The Northern Clemency is that, despite the political change that transforms their lives, the characters themselves rarely engage directly with politics. Only the Glovers' son Tim, who embraces Marxism (and is one of Hensher's few tedious creations, endlessly deploying the epithet "Fascist!") directly tackles the politics of the day. For the others, it becomes a bit like white noise, easily tuned out or held to the margins, occasionally complained about. (Today we'd call it "Miner Fatigue.") And so despite its political milieu, The Northern Clemency is not a political book per se; but it suggests that momentous change will still seep into the lives of even the unengaged. To British audiences, this omission of engagement is, in itself, suggestive, even provocative. To American readers, adrift amid passing references to NUM, Orgreave, and Arthur Scargill, The Northern Clemency may be best read as a microscopically domestic, attentive, and empathetic view of family -- a view that is not as foreign as it seems, Twiglets notwithstanding. As this fine novel reminds us, all unhappy families are more alike than we care to admit.
This fine novel has just been released in paperback and, courtesy of Anchor, I'm very pleased to be able to offer a giveaway copy to a lucky TEV reader. To remind everyone about the rules: I will take all emailed entries until Sunday evening, March 7 at 8 p.m. PST. (I'm heading out of town for a few days, hence the extra lead time this week.) Drop me an email, subject line "REQUESTING CLEMENCY" and be certain to include your full mailing address. (International entries are fine.) Come Sunday night, I will have the random number generator select one reader, and that will be all she wrote. Until then, thanks for the continued patience, and I do absolutely promise a more regular posting schedule again here before too long. Until then, I'm beyond bribing y'all with books to keep you around ...
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