FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 2012 alfa-search Can you find the hidden words? Each word ends with the letters TH. The words <strong>may</strong> be horizontal or vertical. BATH, BREATH, BROTH, CLOTH, DEPTH, EARTH, FROTH, LENGTH, MONTH, MOTH, sudoku MOUTH, NORTH, PATH, SMOOTH, SOUTH, TEETH solution Children number-search Can you find the hidden numbers? They <strong>may</strong> be horizontal or vertical. 00484, 08345, 23234, 24544, 24847, 32992, 43920, 44708, 49847, 56567, 62264, 66823, 70363, 89265, 94839, 98447 3 letter words EMU GET NET SEE SUN TEA TOE YOU 4 letter words BAKE FLEW PATH SHIP 5 letter words word fit Can you fit all the words correctly in<strong>to</strong> the grid? Two letters have already been entered. APPLE EAGLE FINAL HAPPY LEAVE NIGHT PAGES SHEEP
FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 2012 In the opening chapter of his new novel, Dan Rhodes describes a young student in Paris throwing a s<strong>to</strong>ne in<strong>to</strong> the air which unfortunately lands on the face of a baby called Herbert (pronounced “Air-bear” in France). This <strong>lead</strong>s <strong>to</strong> the convergence of many far-fetched s<strong>to</strong>ries. This Is Life appears <strong>to</strong> mark a very deliberate change in the style and form of Rhodes’s fiction. For one thing, it is almost as long as the sum of all his previous novels: Timoleon Vieta Come Home, Gold, Little Hands Clapping and The Little White Car, which he wrote under the name Danuta de Rhodes (the acknowledgments page in this novel gives special thanks “<strong>to</strong> the true author of this work, the petite, beautiful and forever young Danuta de Rhodes - cruelly felled in her prime”). In one sense this change of <strong>to</strong>ne and focus is similar <strong>to</strong> that between Michel Faber’s short, original and disturbing semi-science fiction novel Under the Skin and the well-crafted, obvious bestseller The Crimson Petal and the White. Does this suggest that Rhodes is also about <strong>to</strong> move in<strong>to</strong> the bestseller lists? There is some evidence <strong>to</strong> suggest this <strong>may</strong> be in his mind. In one scene Sylvie, a girl with many jobs, sells an admirer a copy of her favourite novel Timoleon, chien fidele (a translation of Rhodes’s tragic version of Lassie Come Home). “I love the ending,” Sylvie says. “It’s not easy <strong>to</strong> read, but it says something that needs <strong>to</strong> be said. I don’t think I could ever really be friends with anyone who didn’t get this book.” And her admirer replies: “I love the ending <strong>to</strong>o. I’m buying it <strong>to</strong> depress a friend of mine who’s been a bit <strong>to</strong>o happy lately.” Both of them agree on the author’s brilliance and “how underappreciated he was”. Perhaps some readers shuddered when being led in<strong>to</strong> The Anchor, the bleak and oppressive Welsh pub in Rhodes’s novel Gold, where a few dull and doleful cus<strong>to</strong>mers steadily drink their pints of Brains before surrendering <strong>to</strong> the evening pub quiz at which Septic Barry’s local team, “The Children of Previous Relationships”, has never won a match (except when the other team failed <strong>to</strong> turn up). It is even possible, I suppose, that some <strong>may</strong> have balked at entering the museum where Little Hands Clapping is set. This is a German museum that inspires suicide among its visi<strong>to</strong>rs; the caretaker swallows live spiders by night, before superintending the removal of the refrigerated corpses of these suicidal visi<strong>to</strong>rs <strong>to</strong> the local butcher. As for the ending of Rhodes’s Lassie novel, the “sentimental journey” which his fictional fans recommend so highly, it is appallingly sad; some sensitive critics have even called it cruel. Over the last decade Rhodes’s fiction has grown darker and more nightmarish, but This Is Life is his farewell <strong>to</strong> tragedy. It is a happy book about love, from the author of the lacerating short s<strong>to</strong>ry collection Don’t Tell Me the Truth about Love (the epigraph came from Iago’s speech inviting us <strong>to</strong> “Drown cats and blind puppies”). Is he now telling us the truth about love? Or has he become sentimental? It is remarkable indeed for characters in a Dan Rhodes novel <strong>to</strong> get <strong>to</strong> the point where “everything was as wonderful as they had known it would be”. So love is triumphant; and justice, <strong>to</strong>o, predominates. Even baby “Air-bear”, when fortui<strong>to</strong>usly reunited with his mother, loses his italics and regains the romantic dignity of his real name, Olivier. Inevitably there are some dark notes. The boy who holds his breath for longer than a cormorant can stay under water subsides in<strong>to</strong> an unending coma, and the sympathetic transla<strong>to</strong>r, who loves someone who does not love him, goes for solace in<strong>to</strong> a monastery (he does find some comfort, not in the religion of the place, but from the fruit and vegetables he tends). So what has happened <strong>to</strong> Rhodes? It is as if Samuel Beckett had suddenly come up with a glorious, high-spirited comedy. The desperate, idiosyncratic characters of his earlier macabre novels are not abandoned, but they are clothed now in a more traditional habit of s<strong>to</strong>rytelling that reveals how their craziness arises from understandable and even sometimes admirable origins. The author is generous and forgiving <strong>to</strong> them. When the art student accidentally shoots the baby she is looking after, Rhodes allows the bullet merely <strong>to</strong> graze the baby’s arm. I tremble <strong>to</strong> think what might have happened <strong>to</strong> this baby in his previous fiction. The comedy is invigorated by some sharp political and artistic irony involving President Sarkozy, Carla Bruni and even (at a distance) Lady Gaga. But grief and darkness are always near. They are most ominously present in the title of the novel, which refers <strong>to</strong> a theatre presentation of daily routine and bodily functions called Life; this remorselessly shows the characters how much, each day, we leave behind with our faeces and urine and sweat. The “something that needs <strong>to</strong> be said” in Rhodes’s previous novels is that sentimentality is a false medicine bringing little contentment, encouraging disappointment and provoking our vengeance. This novel cleverly avoids such dangerous medicine. It is a reminder of how strange ordinary life is and it challenges us <strong>to</strong> “adjust <strong>to</strong> the darkness”. — Guardian Books The darkness in Dan Rhodes’s novels has given way <strong>to</strong> something lighter
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