Current:Home > News'Shy' follows the interior monologue of a troubled teen boy -ProfitSphere Academy
'Shy' follows the interior monologue of a troubled teen boy
View
Date:2025-04-11 22:47:21
Max Porter has become something of a patron saint of troubled boys — and of parents under pressure.
Shy is the third and shortest of his trio of largely unplotted, unconventional, neo-modernist novels involving unhappy lads and their stressed parents. It's also his first not to rely on an odd supernatural being to help save the day. (Though a couple of dead badgers play an unusual role in this latest dark scenario.)
In Porter's superb first novel, Grief is the Thing With Feathers (2016), a father and his two young sons are unmoored by the sudden death of their mother. They find consolation in a big black crow that seems to have stepped out of the Ted Hughes poems the father is writing about for a scholarly book. This wise-cracking feathered friend takes up residence — metaphorical residence, at any rate — to help the grieving family navigate their loss.
Grief, which hit the right balance between the heartbreak of a mother's death and Porter's inventive, poetic, sardonic, typographically playful text, was a hard act to follow. Porter's second novel, Lanny (2019), offered an unusual take on an outsider child, a whimsical woodsprite with an affinity for nature who goes missing. It featured a shape-shifting mythical green-leafed pagan spirit named Dead Papa Toothwort who feeds on overheard snippets of the villagers' revealing conversations, which form a symphony of snide insinuations about the boy's mother, in particular.
Shy, which is actually Porter's fourth novel, offers an interior monologue accompanied by another chorus of disapproving voices. (His third, intriguingly titled The Death of Francis Bacon (2021), was not published in the U.S.) Set in 1995, Shy captures a harrowing night in the life of an out of control 16-year-old called Shy who's been sent to the Last Chance boarding school for "some of the most disturbed and violent young offenders in the country."
Among Shy's self-described offenses: "He's sprayed, snorted, smoked, sworn, stolen, cut, punched, run, jumped, crashed an Escort, smashed up a shop, trashed a house, broken a nose, stabbed his stepdad's finger." He's also keyed his mother's car.
This is one angry young man. But Porter's compulsively readable primal scream of a novel offers a compassionate portrait of boy jerked around by uncontrollable mood swings that lead to self-sabotaging decisions.
Here's how Porter describes the scene at Last Chance: "They each carry a private inner register of who is genuinely not OK, who is liable to go psycho, who is hard, who is a pussy, who is actually alright, and friendship seeps into the gaps of these false registers in unexpected ways, just as hatred does, just as terrible loneliness does."
On the night in question, Shy sneaks out from the musty, haunted old mansion that is soon to be converted into luxury flats. He plods across the dark fields to a duck pond with his Walkman and a spliff, weighed down by a backpack filled with rocks that's cutting painfully into his skinny shoulders. With this "heavy bag of sorry," he's headed toward water that he hopes will obliterate his demons. His life is a train wreck, "tethered to the last mistake, everyone waiting for the next one," and he's had enough.
We hear Shy's tormented inner monologue along the way, a mess of bad memories and worse dreams. Porter writes: "The night is a shattered flicker-drag of these jumbled memories."
Snatches of his therapists' supportive suggestions and questions — "if things are closing in, go to one of your Cheery Thoughts" and "Is it ever exhausting, being you?" — float to the surface, woefully inadequate to the situation. His mother's despairing attempts to get through to him — "But why, but what possessed you, are you hearing me, what's going on with you, why are you doing this to me" — compound his shame and pain. No help: "His stepdad asking when the Jekyll and Hyde shit will end."
Porter, a former literary editor, is a big deal in England, where his books garner more attention than in the U.S. While hailed for his originality and compassion, he has also been criticized for sentimentality. Without giving away too much, I can say that amid its clanging 90s soundtrack Shy, too, works toward a note of harmonious hope which I, for one, welcomed. However tenuous, it gives readers a life preserver to grab onto.
veryGood! (9497)
Related
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- Travis Barker Makes Cameo in Son Landon's TikTok After Rushing Home From Blink-182 Tour
- Car slams into fire truck in Los Angeles, killing 2, sending 4 firefighters to hospital
- North Korean leader Kim Jong Un expected to meet with Putin
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Tropical Storm Lee forms in Atlantic, forecast to become major hurricane heading to the Caribbean
- Ex-Italy leader claims France accidentally shot down passenger jet in 1980 bid to kill Qaddafi
- Seal Says His and Heidi Klum's Daughter Leni Made Him a Better Person in Heartfelt Message
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Cluster munition deaths in Ukraine pass Syria, fueling rise in a weapon the world has tried to ban
Ranking
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Linda Evangelista Shares She Was Diagnosed With Breast Cancer Twice in 5 Years
- Military funerals at risk in Colorado due to dwindling number of volunteers for ceremonies
- The impeachment trial of Attorney General Ken Paxton is set to begin in the Texas Senate
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Man who killed 6 members of a Nebraska family in 1975 dies after complaining of chest pain
- 5 killed, 3 injured in Atlanta crash that shut down I-85
- Alabama football reciprocates, will put Texas fans, band in upper deck at Bryant-Denny
Recommendation
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
Police broadcast message from escaped murderer's mother during manhunt, release new images of fugitive
Missing artifacts from WWII Nazi code breaker and a father of modern computing found with Colorado woman
Burning Man 2023: See photos of the burning of the Man at Nevada’s Black Rock Desert
Travis Hunter, the 2
Metal debris strikes car windshield on Maine highway and comes within inches of motorist’s face
How Gigi Hadid Describes Her Approach to Co-Parenting With Zayn Malik
First lady Jill Biden tests positive for COVID-19, but President Biden’s results negative so far