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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent novel from a descriptive master., December 13, 1999
Rupert Thomson starts off his brilliant literary career with `Dreams of Leaving'. A young father with dreams of leaving a small English village puts his son (appropriately named Moses) into a basket and floats him down a river. Moses grows up never knowing his real past (being the only one to ever "escape" from the village). Sounds interesting? Don't worry, the story doesn't matter. The author's narrative brilliance will dazzle you. I found myself stopping continuously to admire Thomson's ability to describe even the most commonplace event. Thomson definitely defined his superb style with this novel. Check out `The Insult' another tribute to his craft. David Bowie has Thomson (and `The Insult') on his list of recommended reading.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
the second most beautful text of the 1990s, December 6, 1999
Read entirely whilst incapacitated following an operation, Dreams of Leaving was a beautiful and profund account of attempting to belong, and the desperation for security. Moses Highness represents the secure element; he has been allowed to grow and evolve within the city. In contrast, Chief Inspector Peach (whom I believe to be the true central character), is a man who believes in his apparent security, nursing a secret fear and distrust for the outside world. The crucial point is when Moses visits New Egypt. He is able to look upon it as another village, and is not frightened, although he remains an outsider. Conversely, Peach's childlike innocence (as a result of ignorance) is his burden as he travels to the big city. Dreams of leaving is about change; gradual and sudden, and how individuals evolve accordingly. However, it deals with fear - the fear of difference, and especially the fear of ultimately having to accept change, and live within it. There is a piece of Peach in all of us.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Creates a strange and uncomfortable world, April 28, 2001
Like all Rupert Thomson's settings, the (almost) inescapable village in this novel is strange not because it is alien but precisely because it is so familiar. And yet, things aren't quite right. This village is run by the tyrannical Inspector Peach with his macabre little police museum and his cardboard policemen to scare would-be leavers. As so often in Thomson's novels, this is a story in two parts. Moses, the child, does escape, to an equally familiar and unfamiliar city where he finds his place at a triangular pink night club... All very weird, but compelling, and only a bit first-novel-ish. Recommended if you like to be made uncomfortable by a slight twisting of normality.
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