This is one of those odd books that I found enjoyable to read at the 
time, but when I put it down, I lapsed into so-what? apathy. The premise
 is a fairly trite one. A mid-twenties man returns to his childhood home
 for a funeral, and spends the time reminiscing about growing up, being 
astonished at the changes that have taken place and equally astonished 
at the things that remain unchanged, and resolving a few loose ends from
 his departure five years before. So far, so ho-hum. The twist here is 
that the setting is a small town set in the northeast of Scotland, ruled
 in relative calm by two gangster families, and our hero was run out of 
town after almost marrying the daughter of one family.
The 
setting was one of the attractions for me. I live less than two hours' 
drive from the supposed location of the town of Stonemouth, and many of 
the descriptions of the beaches, forests and streets rang very true. 
Banks' descriptive prose is wonderfully lyrical, and captured the 
atmosphere beautifully. It was a little disconcerting that a major road 
bridge played a prominent role in the story; there are so few of those 
up here, that I kept visualising it as one of the known bridges - the 
Kessock bridge was my personal mental image - which pulled the book's 
geography out of alignment, as if the map was stretched out of true.
The
 childhood reminiscences worked less well. Some were funny and some were
 tragic but none of them really tore at my heart as perhaps they should 
have done. Some of main character Stewart's friends were, frankly, too 
stupid for words. The book interleaves the present-day events with 
vignettes from the past in order to keep hidden a couple of mysteries: 
what Stewart did to get him run out of town, and what really happened to
 the brother of his almost-wife? These were enough to keep me turning 
the pages, so they worked as intended, but frankly the revelations 
weren't particularly mind-blowing.
Stewart himself is rather a 
nothing character. He seems fairly blank, rarely expressing any emotion 
other than fear, although his continuing affection for almost-wife Ellie
 is rather touching. Of the others, Ferg the sardonic bisexual is far 
and away the most interesting. I'd have been happy reading an entire 
book about him, actually. The rest were either caricatures (Ellie's 
thuggish brothers, the stupid friends) or nonentities (like Ellie 
herself, drifting aimlessly through life), although Ellie's younger 
sister Grier probably rates a mention as having slightly more 
personality.
The final chapters are melodramatic, which seems to 
be obligatory these days, and the story then tailspins off into an 
implausible resolution for the main characters. The plot also fails one 
of my favourite tests: could most of the plot be resolved if the 
principals simply sat down and talked everything through? In this case, 
it was a puzzle to me why Ellie, in particular, didn't say to her 
family: I'll decide my own future, thank you very much. As she does, in 
fact, later on. The plot hinges on her being the sort of person who 
allows herself to be pushed around, but only until the plot requires her
 to push back. So that was a big fail, as far as I'm concerned. Three 
stars.
         
 
 
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