• Blog
  • Welcome!
  • Reviews
  • Phriends and Fenomena
  • Contact
  • Readers’ Gallery
    • Readers’ Gallery 2
    • Readers’ Gallery 3

Jay Spencer Green

~ Novelist and Ne'er-Do-Well

Jay Spencer Green

Tag Archives: Reviews

Ivy Feckett: A book to fall in love with

16 Tuesday Apr 2019

Posted by jayspencergreen in Birmingham, Book review, Books, Ivy Feckett, Reviews

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Book reviews, Books, Literature, Reviews

The extraordinarily generous and kind Glenn Russell has just posted a super review of Ivy Feckett is Looking for Love over at Goodreads, accompanied by a lovely imagining of Ivy. Give it a gander!

Book Review: Respectable: The Experience of Class, by Lynsey Hanley

22 Friday Feb 2019

Posted by jayspencergreen in Birmingham, Book review, Sociology

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Book reviews, Books, Lynsey Hanley, Reviews

respectable

I was predisposed to regard Lynsey Hanley’s book favourably, having very much enjoyed her previous work, Estates, and finding that we had a similar background, albeit separated by a decade or so. While Hanley was raised on the Chelmsley Wood council estate in Solihull, I was fortunate enough to grow up in the slightly more salubrious Shirley: my parents were both born into poverty but benefited from postwar employment levels, so that by the time I was born my father had been promoted to foreman in the factory where he worked, enabling my mother to work only part time and the pair of them to take out a mortgage on a house beyond the boundary of Birmingham itself, albeit only barely. The similar backgrounds and biographies are germane to my enjoyment of Hanley’s book, not because they generate a sense of solidarity or recognition, or not only because of that, but also because they go some way to explaining our mutual interest in sociology and our fascination with the issue of class.

Whereas Hanley recounts discovering the middle class for the first time at Solihull Sixth Form College, my first encounter took place at a younger age, 14, when I joined the local tennis club. It was there that I first met not just the middle class but also snobbery, as well as contempt, and disdain, both for me and for ‘my people’. Having been fortuitous and privileged up to that point, it was not until my teenage years that I became conscious of not being good enough, of being observed from the outside and judged negatively, as wanting. It was at this point that class became for me a reality, a lived experience. When I subsequently moved to Manchester and found sociology was an A level subject on the local college curriculum, I took to it like a duck to water.

It was sociology that allowed me – and Hanley – to make sense not just of our place in the world but also of the world itself. And this brings me to the most striking revelation I experienced while reading Respectable: That those who find themselves growing up in the heart of their class rarely have to give their social location a second thought because everyone surrounding them reaffirms the same set of values; they never have cause to doubt nor need to reflect upon the intrinsic merit of their own class habitus (they are “working class and proud of it” or else they are “born to rule,” the “creme de la creme” as one of my schoolfriends – the son of two teachers – put it before going off to work for Lehman’s and DeutscheBank). For other specific class fractions, however – those on the boundaries between two classes, those who have moved between classes (up or down) – class becomes an obsession. Indeed, it is fair to say that this obsession with class and the concern with self-worth are in themselves part of the habitus of these particular class fractions; these are the benighted folk who comprise what may be called the “anxious classes,” that part of the middle class worried about falling into poverty, those upwardly mobile from the working class concerned about keeping up appearances, and those who engage in conspicuous consumption, the nouveaux riches, keen to demonstrate their social mobility. And, of course, Sociologists! It is class as these groups experience it, which is to say, self-consciously, that is really at the heart of Hanley’s book. Not that the book is any the worse for that. The arguments and observations are well supported, making good use of the canonical texts in the Sociology of Class (Paul Willis, Wilmott & Young, Pierre Bourdieu, etc.). But because it uses Hanley’s own experiences anecdotally as a way of introducing topics, it really only provides a phenomenology of the class migrant’s experience of class. Those who have spent their entire lives within their own class may have an entirely different view of class than that described here.

Hanley expresses her admiration for Richard Hoggart’s mid-20th-century classic The Uses of Literacy and to some extent has succeeded in producing a 21st-century version. While this is admirable, it means the book is accompanied by all the attendant vices of Hoggart’s book, particularly the tendency to wander off-topic for the sake of enumerating or recording particular events. Nonetheless, I found very little to disagree with and much to like, within the confines of the account she provides. It would have been interesting to have heard the voices of the people Hanley left behind in her movement between classes. Did they all fail to make it into the middle class? Are any of them better off financially than she is, and if so, how come? What is their view of class? We don’t know. What Hanley has really given us are the pathologies of a particular way of thinking about class, and the reader may conclude that the importance she ascribes to issue is nothing more than the result of her own upbringing. I’m inclined to agree. For a more comprehensive measure of the role and importance of class, I would suggest the need to add a macroscopic perspective, such as that provided by Pickett and Wilkinson’s The Spirit Level, as well as a historical dimension, such as that given in Conor McCabe’s The Sins of the Fathers. Which is not to say that Hanley’s book is not illuminating and a joy to read, only that vignettes, however beautifully and intelligently drawn, are only windows into a life, not maps of an entire world.

Respectable: The Experience of Class, by Lynsey Hanley. 2016. 240 pp. Allen Lane.

Joybringer

15 Monday Aug 2016

Posted by jayspencergreen in Books, Reviews

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

BookTube, Breakfast at Cannibal Joe's, Dan Martin, Reviews, YouTube

DanMartin

“This book was an absolute joy to read.”

So says BookTuber Dan Martin in his Goodreads review of Breakfast at Cannibal Joe’s. But Dan doesn’t stop there, he reciprocates, bringing joy into my world with this amazing review on YouTube, in which he calls the book “Hilarious” and “Maddeningly good,” among other things. This is the first time Dan has reviewed an indie book, so I’m hugely flattered, especially since it’s my debut book. Dan himself has a book due out in October, Operation Cure Boredom, which sounds like a hoot. It’s on my wishlist already.

The TBR Pile Verdict Is In!

08 Tuesday Sep 2015

Posted by jayspencergreen in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Breakfast at Cannibal Joe's, Reviews, The TBR Pile

Clare at The TBR Pile has posted a wonderful review of Breakfast at Cannibal Joe’s that it will take me some time to get over. You can read it here. For the sake of posterity, I had to take a screenshot of The TBR Pile’s home page.

Recommended!

Buy My Books!

ALLi

The Alliance of Independent Authors - Author Member

Follow Jay Spencer Green on WordPress.com
jayspencergreen

jayspencergreen

Novelist and Ne'er-do-well. Dry English wit a specialty.

View Full Profile →

Follow me on Twitter

My Tweets

Goodreads

Sites to See

Archives

  • October 2020
  • October 2019
  • August 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • April 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • December 2018
  • September 2018
  • July 2018
  • April 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • September 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • November 2016
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • July 2016
  • June 2016
  • May 2016
  • April 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015

Follow me on

  • View Jayspencergreen’s profile on Facebook
  • View JaySpencerGreen’s profile on Twitter

Blog at WordPress.com.

crosspollenblog

We are the bees of the invisible. (Rilke)

ANDY C DIY

ANDY CARRINGTON PUNK-POET

Eric Boaro - Musicologist

Ritornate all'antico, e sarà un progresso • Let us return to the past; it will be a step forward (G. Verdi)

An American Editor

Commentary on Books, eBooks, and Editorial Matters

The Beachy Reader

plantladyreader

thrifted books, reviews and house plants

Meu Diário de Intercâmbios

Au Pair - Custodial - Bolsista Stipendium Hungaricum

Stephen Writes

Book reviews, and original bookish content

READ TO RAMBLE

KBbookreviews

Book Reviews, Bookish Talk, and Queer Book Recs!

BEFOREWEGOBLOG

Reading All The Books

Andrea Reads Books

On the Book Shelf.

MYMonkey MIND

Your Brain is a Radio that Does What its Told

Gil Reads Books

"I have always imagined that Paradise will be a kind of library" - Borges

BRAINCHILD

gehadsjourney.wordpress.com

Broken Tune's Blog

Liz Loves Books

The Wonderful World of Reading

Ocean of myths

Lonely Power Poles

Writing, Reviewing, Rambling

Jordi Ballart Macabich

Benvinguts al meu blog! Soc un escriptor i nedador aficionat, enamorat del mar i amb interessos molt variats...

Creatively V

Creatively inspired projects for socially minded arts and crafters

KC Freeman - Fantasy & Paranormal Romance

USA Today Best-Selling Author

DaisyandDragon

Book reviews to start with, who knows what else i'll write about!

Witty and Sarcastic Bookclub

Let's talk books!

Linda's Book Bag

Loving books and reading

The Reading Closet

Books, adventure and cups of tea!

PrincessofPages

Books

The Artsy Reader

Winstonsdad's Blog

Home of Translated fiction and #translationthurs

  • Follow Following
    • Jay Spencer Green
    • Join 108 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Jay Spencer Green
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...