Sunday 19 September 2010

#68 The Drought, by JG Ballard (Harper Perennial)

If it’s a dystopian future you’re seeking, look no further than JG Ballard, whose bleak prognoses ensured ‘Ballardian’ would enter the English language. But it would be wrong to consider all of his works wholly depressing.

Novels such as The Drought, which tell of a worldwide shortage of water caused by man’s production of industrial waste, foretell bleakness on an apocalyptic scale. The humans left in this world face incredible hardships and impossible decisions, but despite the horrors, it’s also a tale of survival and adaptation.

I was immediately hooked by The Drought, although I grew more unsure the more I read. The characters were hard to like, I struggled a little with the structure and I was caught by surprise by the leap forward in time after their opening struggle to reach the coast. A dreamlike quality is created for the reader, who stumbles along in the characters’ wake enduring problem after problem and disappointment after setback, and this is curiously disengaging.

That said, Ballard’s use of language and imagery, even symbology, is remarkable. He paints a picture better than most authors – and it’s a beautiful picture regardless of the horrors being portrayed. This is regardless of the fact I regularly needed a dictionary close at hand to get to grips with Ballard’s chosen words.

The Drought therefore becomes a book I admired rather than enjoyed. The sudden violence and psychological trauma provoked an unsettling response. The struggle of the wildly disparate, although surprisingly few, characters to retain their identity is fought as much as they battle for survival - and I felt as though I was struggling alongside them.

It’s not the sort of book you would select for a gentle Sunday evening in front of the Antiques Roadshow, then, but if this challenge is about furthering my literary knowledge as much as finding new authors I like, then books such as The Drought and authors such as JG Ballard are essential reading.

So, rating time:

#68 The Drought, by JG Ballard (Harper Perennial) - 7/10

Next up: The New Confessions, by William Boyd (Penguin Group)

  • Click here for the full list of books so far, and their rating
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