Dark Places - Debbie Bennett
Last weekend, I found a copy of Gillian
Flynn’s Dark Places, which I bought
for the princely sum of one pound. No, the writer will get no benefit from this
onward sale, but at least she’ll get a warm fuzzy glow from knowing she’s
helped with the upkeep of Britain’s canal system.
***
SPOILER ALERT *** If you haven’t read this book, intend to read it, and don’t
wish to either be affected by my opinions or find out the ending, please click
off this page and go and do something more productive. Write something, maybe?
Watch tv? Whatever. But don’t read this. You have been warned …
So I’ve read most of Flynn’s books. Gone
Girl really wasn’t my cup of tea (neither the book nor the film) – not due
to the writing, but more to do with the plot itself. Flynn is an accomplished
writer, and the fact that she can craft an entire novel around two inherently
unlikeable self-obsessed characters, with barely a redeeming quality between
them, says a lot for her storytelling abilities. I read Sharp
Objects a while back too, which to be honest I can’t remember that much
about. But Dark Places I really
rather liked.
It’s an interesting structure. The present, as told by the main
protagonist Libby in first person, and the
past, as told by various other characters in third person. It works, once
you get into the rhythm of it. I quite like these alternative story-telling
methods when they’re done properly.
And therein lies the problem. When it’s
done properly. When you tell a story from the point of view of character A, you
can only know what character A knows – whether you’re first person, third
person, or whatever. That’s easy enough to understand. Joe Bloggs doesn’t know
his wife’s about to slip poison in his cocoa, so he can’t suddenly decide to go to the
pub on a whim instead of staying in that night – and if he does venture out to his local
without a very good reason, you can bet your life that in this world of the
instant review, somebody will call you out on Amazon or Goodreads.
But flip this on its head. Joe Bloggs
doesn’t know his wife actually intends to kill him – but he does know that Betty is mentally
unstable and the neighbour saw her buying poison while muttering how much she
hated her husband. And the knowing of it must
cause him to act or behave appropriately.
That’s where Dark Places fell down for me, as many other books have done. Libby’s
mother Patty has engaged a hit-man to kill her – Patty – so that her family
will benefit from the life insurance. This is a crucial point in the book, a
part of the whodunnit big-reveal at the end. Which would be fine, if we didn’t
get a lot of the build-up from Patty’s point of view throughout the story. And yet she never once thinks about this
little nugget of information while she’s struggling to pay the bills and keep a
roof over their heads. Really? We get a few tiny clues as she’s lying on
the floor dying, but that’s way too late and turns the whole scene into one
giant plot device.
That’s cheating, in my opinion. If we
are in Character A’s head, we’d better know not only just what Character A knows, but everything Character A knows. Or at least everything relevant to
the story. All the while we are in Patty’s head and she’s worrying about her
ex-husband, and where the next meal is coming from and desperately searching
for her missing son, and yet that vital scene of her engaging a hit-man is not
only missing, but never even thought
about. If I was contemplating killing myself, for whatever reason, I’m
damned sure it’d occupy most of my brain for most of the time! If not the wheres
and the hows, then at least the worry about the whens and whether the kids
would be involved. Has she done the right thing? Will it hurt? What if he doesn’t
do it, even though he’s been paid? What if he tells the police? The questions are
endless.
Don’t get me wrong. As I said – I really
liked this book. I’ll probably give it a 4 at some point when I get around to
an Amazon review. But I’m angry with the writer for breaking that pact with the
reader and losing my trust.
Point-of-view. POV. There’s so much
written about it – what it is and how to do it right as a writer. But this is
so wrong.
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