[identity profile] tosomja.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] trennels
I read all the four school Marlow books as a child and absolutely loved them, read them 100s of times etc.  Now I have rediscovered them and realised only for the first time that there were others - I just thought that all the references to the holidays and falcons etc were things which happened 'off-stage', as it were.  So I acquired a version of the GGB Thuggery Affair, but found it really hard going and nothing like as good as the school books.  In fact I gave up once altogether, and then came back to it and managed to finish but wasn't hugely impressed..  I have also acquired The Ready Made Family which I enjoyed much more, but still, not as much as the school books. 
Given that it requires a fair amount of time and money to acquire the rarer Marlow books, it is really worth the struggle? Or are the school books the most popular for a reason?  What do you think - does anyone actually prefer the non-school books?   I don't want to spend a lot of effort on them only to wish that I'd kept to the school books and kept my memories of AF as good as they were!

And also what do you think of the historical ones? Are they as good, and do they connect to the later Marlows in any way apart from the characters being called Marlowe?

Date: 2007-10-08 07:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] antfan.livejournal.com
I really like the Thuggery Affair, especially Jukie, I find him fascinating, and I think that last part where he and Patrick drive through the night is just about the only time in the series that Patrick gets seriously challenged and has to do a bit of self-questioning in terms of his beliefs and background. Yes, Patrick's almost likeable in those chapters. I find Lawrie amusing too.

The slang doesn't bother me at all - (maybe it would if I read the book for the first time as an adult?) And I like the fact that the Marlows are being confronted with a more - to me - authentic teenage world at last - out at the coffee shop with oikish lads showing off and out to impress and even trying to pick Lawrie up. (Setting Lawrie in the middle of all that is very comical, and the way she behaves is so of a piece with her character - playing along then getting scared and generally causing mayhem.)

I don't like the fact it all happens in a day, though. I agree with you there - it means something is inevitably missing in terms of character development. And I don't like Peter's bit, where they decide to finish him off - that I find hard to believe.

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