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Morning star brown novel
Morning star brown novel












Yet that presence does not detract from Brown’s predominant style - Powler is in many respects a metaphor of, and repository for, the community’s historical and present struggles. Underpinning the novel’s social realism is an element of the magical kind - the spectral presence of Peg Powler, a bogey figure inhabiting the underground tunnels nearby. Yet Ironopolis also records the resilience and solidarity that ensures that most residents, whatever has befallen them, do not want to be shipped out and away by the housing association. One bureaucratic decision - the transfer of the housing stock - shapes the trajectories of many of the characters’ lives. The unseen protagonists in Brown’s novel are those distant and uncaring public-sector landlords who bear responsibility for the dilapidated tower blocks. Peel block has been taken over by an alternative community trying to breathe life back into the society but viewed with suspicion by longer-standing residents. The tower blocks are named - almost mockingly - after long-dead and far-distant prime ministers such as Asquith, Attlee and Palmerston.

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The Burn estate, built on the site of a slum, is itself now being run down and dismantled to make way for a new housing association, keen to profit from the tenants’ increasing desperation and powerlessness. This is certainly a society at the front line of the class struggle, however unwittingly. Jim Clarke, his body and mind smashed, struggles to recall the exhilarating acid raves of his teen years, while Frank and Scott Hulme recall the humiliations heaped on them by hard-man Vincent, husband of Jean and father of Alan, his peaceful and pedestrian son.

morning star brown novel

Jean Barr, dying of cancer, records her childhood friendship with an enigmatic local artist whose work is heavily influenced by the estate’s abandoned iron works and underground drainage system. The style, predominantly social realist, is at times uncompromising and often bleak in recording the injustices and ill-luck heaped upon the protagonists. In so doing, Brown exposes the loyalties and antagonisms that lie within the infrastructure of any working-class community –- the veins that keep it alive. Glen James Brown’s debut work is breathtaking in its ambition and delivery.Įmploying the testimonies of six different people living on a Middlesbrough estate and using a range of voices and letters, the author meshes together their shared histories over a number of decades. BY ANY measure, Ironopolis is an extraordinary novel.














Morning star brown novel