Book Jacket

 

rank 3714 (-174)
word count 11402
date submitted 11.05.2008
date updated 10.02.2009
genres: Fiction
classification: moderate
incomplete

Living with the Truth

Jim Murdoch

 

A tired old bookseller gets to spend two days with the personification of truth.

 

My book chronicles two days in the life of an old bookseller, Jonathan Payne, who is forced to share his life with the personification of truth. The book is character-driven so nothing spectacular happens – they wander along a promenade, spend time in his shop, have a curry, go fishing – but all the time they are doing these things Truth is opening Jonathan's eyes to the truths about himself, his neighbours and finally the true nature of the universe. Nothing is as he might have expected. By the end of the book, having learned far more about himself than he ever wanted to know, Jonathan finds out that it's usually never too late to start again. Only sometimes it is.

 
 

tags

england, humor, truth

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6 comments

 

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Gemma wrote 638 days ago

I started on chapter 2, based on Debbie's comments, and it felt like a start.
Your character seemed to be over reacting to things.
I really like the quirky idea for the book.
Can you carry it off?

karen wester newton wrote 433 days ago

I actually liked chapter 1, to some extent, but I think it is much too long. If you could cut it in half, at least, it would help termendously. For one thing, you do such a good job of making the protagonist so unlikeable, people will stop reading because they won't care about him.

It is an interesting idea, interestingly portrayed.

Vanessa wrote 484 days ago

I found your style very engaging and love the idea of personifying truth. You've found plenty of nooks and crannies for humour while maintaining the integrity of your concept. I think it is fair to say that the introspective detail is a little slow, but the charm in the writing is a great compensation. Very good luck with the project.

Violet wrote 515 days ago

I agree with all comments saying this needs to start with Chapter 2. The trouble with Chapter 1 (and some of the later passages) is that it's all tell and no show. However sparkily written the 'tell' is, (and it is) it's like being fed a great meal instead of being allowed to use your own cutlery. I was engaged by this but something was bothering me and then I realised...it's a great short story idea. It could be really intriuging and emotionally punchy. But stretched out over a novel, without much plot - I think accepting an abstract personification of a virtue is a lead character would just become too irritating, it's didactic instead of dramatic. I should stress that if this sounds harsh, I only stopped by to offer my opinions (such as they are) because I think getting published is sometimes just the right writer finding the right idea. This writer is a natural - fluent, witty, inventive, it *reads* like a book - who would benefit from a stronger premise and plot, to better balance up the show and tell, without cramping his style. Also, and make of this what you will, I recently read a piece of virtually plot-less much-lauded literary fiction and it was a right bunch of cobblers, not as much fizz as this. Even if a character is essentially all about their interior life, don't be afraid to make things happen in their actual life.

Cindy Bias wrote 529 days ago

Jim,

I, anyway, did like the inclusion of chapter one. About a third of the way through chapter three, though, I caught myself peeking ahead. All the same, the psychologist in me likes this story and can appreciate the slice of life you offer re: a person like this, i.e., one who tends to live in his head, compartmentalizes his emotion, and in general tends to keep to himself. The humor is what makes Jonathan unique in this regard and likely to snag the general reader; perhaps you could offer more of this early on in chapter three? And since truth is relative for someone like me, I enjoyed your version of Truth as well. ;) Should you upload more, do let me know.

Cindy

Gemma wrote 638 days ago

I started on chapter 2, based on Debbie's comments, and it felt like a start.
Your character seemed to be over reacting to things.
I really like the quirky idea for the book.
Can you carry it off?

Debbie wrote 638 days ago

This was an interesting read, but I felt that if you started with chapter 2, you'd hook the reader in a lot more quickly as chapter 1 is rather slow. I confess I skipped most of chapter 1 and only got interested at chapter 2 - you get enough of Jonathan's nature from the way he reacts to the stranger at the door - you don't need to tell it to us in detail in chapter 1, as you're showing us with a bit of action in chapter 2.

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