The novel “Bee Sting” written by Irish novelist Paul Murray, involves a family drama that is narrated from multiple angles to a family of four struggling in the midst of financial and existential crisis. Throughout its 656 pages, the mysteries, secrets and self-deception experienced by its members are revealed one after the other.
Unstable service
The novel was shortlisted for the 2023 Booker Prize, and has been described as “hilarious, heartbreaking, epic and brutally honest”. The award website summarized the following: “An icy road, a charming stranger and a bee stuck in the bride’s veil. Can a moment of misfortune change the course of life? “
events
The events of the novel take place in a town in contemporary Ireland where we learn about the Barnes family who are in financial trouble. Father Dickie flees to the woods after the collapse of his lucrative car business in 2008, where he works long hours on a shelter project to predict the end of the world, while his exasperated wife, Imelda, sells their wares on eBay. Their daughter Cass, first in her class, is apathetic and fears for her future. Their 12-year-old son BJ, who is in debt He plans to run away. We see each person’s life through the eyes of each person during the worsening environmental disaster, paralleled by floods, droughts and the collapse of the family, the parents continuing to deny their previous lives, and the loss and turmoil of both of them. Teenage children.
Hon
Quoting novelist William Faulkner, Murray said in an interview that “the past never dies,” but preferred to write about the present with all its horrors, including climate change.
The author draws the novel’s characters as life-like, they have moments of love and generosity despite their faults and problems, and tracks their transformation by using a cyclical method of telling stories in each person’s tongue, as change appears. Some of them are funny, others are sad. The novel initially introduces us to wife Imelda’s sharp temper and materialistic tendencies, and as she lifts the curtain on her life, her marital circumstances, and the difficulties of her childhood, it appears to be the self-delusion she experiences. Purely human nature. In this way, the writer enters the characters’ worlds to bring them to life with a new perspective.
curiosity
What drew critics to the novel was its interest in teenage life and friendship and family relationships, father-son relationships, sibling rivalry, tragedy, self-destruction and denial, as well as the subjectivity of misguiding people. , all on par with the creativity of Funny Moments. The British newspaper “The Daily Telegraph” described the novel as “a brilliant work of fiction, sharp in mind and keen in thought, but big in heart”.
“Coffee evangelist. Alcohol fanatic. Hardcore creator. Infuriatingly humble zombie ninja. Writer. Introvert. Music fanatic.”