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pondělí 3. října 2011

Kit Whitfield: Bareback

   I came across this book some time ago while browsing on some blogs about literature. It caught my eye (obviously) but I completely forgot about it. And than, I was going through some cheap books in those wooden boxes in front of Palác Luxor and I found myself keeping this book in my hands. As this book is quite well known and (more importantly) well received in the GB and the US, the fact that it cost half money than Eat, Pray, Love is really sad.
   Well, why did it catch my eye? It’s called Bareback (Benighted in the US version). For those unfamiliar with this word…look it up on Urban Dictionary. And the second reason - it’s about werewolves. (Un)fortunately, it’s not about werewolves barebacking each other…although I might enjoy reading something like that too. (My BF was like What the f******ck are you reading???).
   Anyway, it has nothing to do with anything naughty. The story takes place in an alternative world where almost everyone is werewolf (but the word is not used in the book, which is actually quite logical). When I say almost, I mean more than 99 % of population. The rest are called nons or, in slang, barebacks (oooooh). The main heroin Lola works in DORLA (Department of Ongoing Lycanthropic Activity) – as every other non has to. At the beginning, one of her colleagues and friends gets his hand bit of by a lyco and than he gets shot in head. She is to investigate the case, which leads her to many, many, many and (yeah, I am about to repeat it once more) many discoveries she would prefer not to have done.
   So we have a detective story. But the book was also compared with 1984, which is quite a good comparison. The whole point of the story is a classic anti-utopia. But Whitfield is also great in describing psychology of Lola. Barebacks are a very small minority, which has a huge impact on them. They also feel they are crippled or that they have some kind of defect – and in the world they live in, they actually do have a defect. But the main aim of DORLA is to keep guard during full moon nights. For centuries, there has been a law that when people “fur up” on the full moon night, they have to be locked up indoors. Of course, there are accidents, people don’t get into shelters, they get out of their houses and so on. And then, there are prowlers – those who break the curfew intentionally. DORLA agents have to catch these lunes (metamorphosed lycos) and get them into shelters. So there is a paradox – people (often) hate nons but they also need them. Mainstream society can’t actually afford not to have DORLA. Imagine that once a month, everyone would get crazy, run through city, fought with each other and destroyed everything that gets into his or her way. That would hardly work.
   Nons have to start working for DORLA when they are 18 and they leave at the age of 60 (or…something like that). The only problem is a quarter of them are heavily injured or dead by that time. On the other hand, DORLA is not a bunch of nice, smiley guys either. They tend to arrest people and not give them any human rights (like lawyer or a phone call). And than they beat them. Brutally. Which is OK because only heavy wounds don’t heal when they fur up.
   Lola has to deal with much. She doesn’t speak to her mother at all and her relationship with her sister isn’t the best one either (but it gets much better during the book). She is under pressure of everyday life in society which hates her, her friend is dead, her sister is obviously worried that her coming baby might be a bareback and DORLA is more understaffed than ever so she has loads of work.
   But she copes. She has a whole system to protect herself. She wears gloves (palms of non are much softer compared to lycos). She fills her life with work so she doesn’t have to think about other things. And she is very perceptive when speaking to someone. She listens to little words people use and immediately deducts things others would easily overlook. She controls herself and her emotions extremely well but as she is confronted with some tough situations, she sometimes loses it.
   Oh, and there is a new word into “weird vocabulary”. Loten. It’s supposed to be “moonlight so bright you can see in it” in Old English. Unfortunately, Google doesn’t know this word so either Whitfield made the word up or Google is a really bad source for Old English vocabulary. In this case, I guess it’s the former.
  Anyway, the title doesn’t sound like it, but this is actually a good book. Sure, it’s mostly the story but not just that – Whitfield has a nice English and some of her descriptions and similes were absolutely amazing (like when Lola describes her feelings after beating a man as if her bones were cold and empty…I think it’s a rather impressive image). And obviously, there are piles of stuff about xenophobia, hatred between classes, manipulation of society, etc. Read it…but it’s still a good idea to cover the book (the looks guys in public transport were giving me…).
   And there will be a movie under the title Benighted. 

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