Monday 4 March 2013

Half Blood Blues - Esi Edugyan

The Crown, Bathford, 28th February 2013

A select group, with absentees due to overseas engagements, thespian diversions and ill health.

It was a qualified thumbs up for Half Blood Blues. Chris B (whose choice it was and who sent his notes ahead) spoke for most of us when he highlighted the book's general accessibility – despite the extensive use of vernacular, it 'winged along' nicely. We bought into the atmosphere, the way the tension of the immediate pre-war period and then of the fall of Paris was used not just as a background but as a framework for the story. The part of the story involving Sid and Chip as older men also created a believable and affectionate portrait of two old sparring partners, who had been through a lot together and who still (at least on Sid's part) hadn't really worked it all out.
Lots to enjoy: The detective story structure kept us guessing until the end, and then didn't necessarily fill in all the blanks, depending on your point of view. There was a great love story going on between Sid and Delilah, which most felt was sensitively and powerfully expressed – we really felt his frustration and empathized with his lack of faith in his ability to compete with a younger man, and cheered for him when he got his girl (for a while, at least). Sid was a very human and fallible narrator/protagonist.
Edugyan's writing style was compact yet powerful; there were some passages that demanded to be read again simply because you suddenly realized that she'd painted a tremendously powerful picture without making you aware of any kind of elaborate setup – guerrilla writing? For example Hiero's playing was effectively described as 'solar'… This unpretentious voice helped the narrative to flow, and in particular her gift for striking a believable note in dialogue between 'blokey blokes' was noted and appreciated. The simple idea of US and German jazz musicians, black and white, getting together just for the love of the music, made for a beguiling central thread.
It wasn't a smooth ride all the way however: There was some trenchant criticism that the book managed, despite its central theme, to avoid any mention of the Nazi sterilization programme that – some sources say – rendered all German-born blacks incapable of procreation by 1937. And there was quite a lot of discussion about the credibility of the plot. Did we really believe or relate to the motivation that drove Sid to pull the visa trick? Would Sid's obvious (but usually resigned rather than bitter and twisted) jealousy have come out that way? For several that final chapter didn't quite live up to the ground carefully laid before it.


In summary:
Chris B: Found it easy to read though didn't make a deep impact afterwards. Drew a parallel with Dancing on the Edge - recent BBC drama. No score given yet
Steve: liked it for its voice, style and ability to surprise (human zoo?). 7.5 points
Ras: Quite enjoyed it, though prose a bit indigestible, and completely thwarted by the end. 5 points
Chris W: Found it very easy to read – could empathise with Sid and his loves, jealousy. Powerful about Paris – wanted more from Hiero at the end. 7 points
Neil: Found it hard to get started but then enjoyed it, particularly the interplay between Sid and Chip. However, found the visa twist hard to stomach. Plausibility issues. 6.8 points
Mark Th: Superb awareness of and ability to write male relationships; language a bit inconsistent; some historical issues. Overall enjoyable: 7.3 points

Rob - one of the missing people, basically agrees almost totally with the above summary, including that the last chapter sold the reader a bit short. 7.5 


1 comment:

Richard said...

Hi All

I have finally finished Half-Blood Blues.

I very much enjoyed this book - I liked the characters, the writing style, the dialogue, the jazz, the history.

I had only got the name of the author (Esi Edugyan) and I ha-d got it in my head that this was a Scandinavian man who was writing (and I thought that he captured a USA-black-jiving way of talking extremely well). I was very surprised therefore when I found out that it was a Woman, Canadian but of African (Ghanain) origins! - and yers, I now think that SHE captured a USA-black-jiving way of talking extremely well!

I also liked a lot of the other language, which was evocative and poetic:
"I’d set my axe against the wall and it was like I could feel the damn disc just sitting in there, still warm. I felt its presence so intensely it seemed strange the others ain’t sensed it too. Its wax holding all that heat like an altar candle. "
"rot was cheap, see, the drink of French peasants, but it stayed like nails in you gut "
"The sunrise so fierce it seeped through the gaps, dropped like cloth on our skin "
" he’s a master of talking big and saying nothing. But conviction in a voice ain’t like meat in a stew. It ain’t got no sustenance".

She got a real feel for jazz, and integrated her fictional jazz characters seamlessly with real historical jazz figures: Arthur Briggs, Sidney Bechet, Louis Armstrong, Bill Coleman, Josephine Baker and even the German band created by the Nazis to take attention away from black jazz artists, The Golden Seven.

So, overall, a good book. I have now read the account on our website and agree that the ending was not as good as I might have hoped, but that did not detract massively for me from the overall book. Score: 7.25.