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C**E
Brilliant, Devastating and Bleak.
WARNING. This review contains SPOILERS and this book will chip away at your belief in humanity and leave you wretched!I feel like a petulant child wanting to howl at the author, saying "it's not fair" and accusing her of tricking me, betraying my faith in her story. Yet in truth she did none of these things. We know, if not from the outset then very early on, that Jacob is a bad man. His first act alone should be one we all condemn him for, let alone the second, and yet his utter inability to see himself as a bad man draws us in deeper and further along the path of his story. I wilfully continued to see him as he saw himself, as a man repulsed by the filth and violence of the world around him, whilst all the time he is the maggot wriggling at the heart of the book. Time and again he is given opportunities for a better life, he is given hope and chances at happiness and each time he dashes those hopes by his own violent need to defend his happiness at all costs. Just like his master's drunken, ignorant son with the wine glass he smashes everything fine and beautiful to pieces and yet what he despises in the son he cannot see in his own actions.This book has apparently been hailed as a masterpiece and in terms of the writing and the historical texture I would wholeheartedly agree. So why four stars not five? Well a review is a personal thing and part of my criteria is how much I enjoyed the book. In the end I wished I had not read the ending. I have never wanted to rewrite the ending of a book more than this one. Not to give Jacob a happy ever after because that was never going to happen and he didn't deserve it. Yet I found in the ending a glee in the violent dashing of the readers hopes beyond anything we could have imagined. There was a glorying in the utter destruction of everything we as readers had wanted. I wanted Jacob to be reformed and even knowing that he wouldn't be to see him so utterly reduced to an evil madman was beyond where I wanted to go. I think this is seen far too often in modern entertainment of all kinds, as though by bringing the audience to its knees and keeping it there, wallowing in grief is in some way laudable. As a writer, if you have any talent, you are given the privilege of playing with your readers emotions and that is something to toy with at your peril. Despite the quality of the writing I would need some persuading to read anything by this author again for now I am left with a heavy weight in my heart that will take some time to shift.
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