Shy has messed up big time, and is currently on his last chance at the Last Chance, a residential school for violent, troubled boys on the cusp of young adulthood. If those books were concerned with boyhood ( Grief’s widower must also carry on being a parent to his small sons), then Shy catapults us into the angst of adolescence, accompanied by the heavy, heady sound of drum and bass, the obsession and release of its eponymous protagonist. ‘I thought you’d appreciate a change from garage flowers.’ Both were works of multiple voices, not always human and both introduced Porter as a writer meticulously interested in rhythm, compression and the profoundly generative process of conveying the intersection between individual consciousness and collective identity. Then, four years later, Lanny, which followed a young boy through village life, with appearances by the ancient spirit of Dead Papa Toothwort, and explored issues of alienation and isolation. First, in 2015, came Grief is the Thing with Feathers, in which a widowed Ted Hughes scholar is both shocked and comforted by the arrival of a croaking, crouching crow. Shy concludes Max Porter’s informal trilogy of short, poetic novels powered by pain and polyphony.
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