Product Details
The Bird Room

The Bird Room
By Chris Killen

List Price: £9.99
Price: £6.10 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details

Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

44 new or used available from £0.01

Average customer review:

Product Description

When a boy named Will meets Alice, he can't believe his luck. She's smart, sexy and, much to Will's surprise, in love with him. Alice brings meaning to his urban existence and his McJob. But the course of modern love did never run smooth and soon devotion leads Will to something darker. Elsewhere in the city Helen is an actress. Or she will be one day. For now she finds work as a model. She used to be called Clair, but she wants to be something new and she can be anyone. She's an actress, remember.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #319732 in Books
  • Published on: 2009-01-22
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 208 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
A blackly comic tale of awkward young love. --Guardian

Review
The Bird Room is an astonishingly good first novel. I was gripped from the first page. (M. J. Hyland)

A strangely merry look at the agony of true love. (Dazed and Confused)

The Bird Room is a beautiful Chinese puzzle of a novel. (Toby Litt)

Sparely written, cool, jaunty, darkly comic, with a sharp ear for voice and manner. (Guardian)

Chris Killen's first novel is either disturbingly brilliant or brilliantly disturbing. Whichever, I loved it. (Steven Hall)

A darkly stylish comedy of sexual manners. (Metro)

Beautiful, laconic and chockablock with uneasy sex - like having a threesome with your girlfriend and Richard Brautigan. (Richard Milward)

3:AM Magazine
A very good book. Says something deep and often unspoken about the human condition . . . like a Jarvis Cocker chorus.


Customer Reviews

bleak, funny and claustrophic - an excellent first novel5
This is an intruiging novel about insecurities, alienation, and relationships, from a promising first-time author.

The language is sparse and considered and accurate; even in the midst of misery and depression, there's nuggets of sharp black humour and witty observation. Killen's minimalist style lends the work feel of a collection of related short stories, or vignettes: bleak snippets of the characters' lives that build into a disconcerting and compelling whole. The projections of the characters' social anxieties were almost tangible, and made me feel physically uncomfortable while reading. The author rapidly sketches out the fear and panic and pain that Will and Helen experience without getting too involved and bogged down in heavy detail, and his use of dark comedy prevents the novel from becoming too claustrophobic. The immediacy of the text is its strength.

A highly accomplished first novel; very readable; a definite recommendation.

Nothing special2
This book has one or two things going for it (including the odd humorous moment), but I couldn't really say that it did a whole lot for me. It's interesting to see the main character's paranoia being conveyed via the narrative, but it just didn't really seem to go anywhere particularly worth bothering with. Sorry if I'm getting up on my ivory horse, but (despite the curiously unsourced quotations that hype things up on the cover) I found it to be superficial and instantly forgettable. I am sure there are those who will regard this as being a triumphant example of thought-provoking post-modern literature. However, it left me feeling about as cold as an inhospitable female's reproductive tract.

Into the void1
I was not very thrilled by this book. I found it to be quite mind numbingly void of any real story plot and intensely boring.

I soon grew fed up of the ramblings of Will (the 1st main character we encounter), who constantly rambles on about his own short comings and how much he wishes he could be like the other Will! He goes into a basic meltdown and drags everyone reading the book down with him.

Then there is Helen/Claire, a wannabe porn star, that appears to be more like a prostitute than porn star, as she goes off to meet creepy men who pay her for sexual favours/porn film auditions.

All in all I found it boring, seedy (not sexy) and very depressing.