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Poppy Shakespeare: A Novel
Poppy Shakespeare: A Novel
Poppy Shakespeare: A Novel
Ebook331 pages6 hours

Poppy Shakespeare: A Novel

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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Highly original and darkly funny, Clare Allan's debut novel explores the relationship between N., a patient in a mental institution, and Poppy Shakespeare, a new and disturbingly 'sane' arrival who finds herself having to feign mental illness in order to be released.
There are 25 residents at the Dorothy Fish, one for each letter of the alphabet - the 'X' chair is vacant. The day hospital sits on the bottom floor of an impossibly tall tower, stretching so high into the sky that its uppermost residents can see right round the world and back in through the window behind them. The system is simple: the crazier you are, the higher up the tower they put you.
When Poppy Shakespeare arrives, N. has already been at Dorothy Fish for thirteen years, and spends her days quietly, smoking in the common room and swapping medication with her fellow patients. But what happens in the next six months will change both of their lives forever.
In this inventive and brutally comic novel, Clare Allan captures the familiar and sometimes terrifying idiosyncrasies of a modern institution, asking the question: who is mad and who is sane? And who gets to decide? By turns hilarious and heartbreaking, Poppy Shakespeare is a significant achievement of voice and insight.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateDec 10, 2008
ISBN9781596917118
Poppy Shakespeare: A Novel
Author

Clare Allan

Clare Allan was the winner of the first Orange/Harpers short-story prize. She lives in London. This is her first novel.

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Rating: 3.364077766990291 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

103 ratings7 reviews

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    When I started this book I thought I was in for a treat, as it received many raving reviews. N's language quickly became annoying tough (Do you know what I'm saying) All of the characters, apart from Poppy Shakespeare, were thoroughly unlikable, and in the end I just grew tired of the book and kept counting how many pages were still left. Admittedly Poppy's story was very interesting and this was what kept me reading, but for me it didn't make up for the rest of the book.Whatever point the writer was trying to make about British psychiatry, to me she just comes across as very harsh on anyone suffering from mental illness. Also the idea that patients make up symptoms so as not to be discharged comes across as ludicrious to anyone who has ever spend time inside a psychiatric hospital - as I read the author has.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I so wanted to like this book, from the blurb on the back it sounded interesting. I just didn't get it - I didn't like the way it was written, I didn't find it particularly amusing, in fact I thought it was sad. I know it was supposed to be a parody, but I do think there is probably more than a grain of truth in the story, and that what happened to Poppy and N could actually happen to some extent within the British Mental Health system.I struggled to keep my attention on the book whilst reading it, and found myself easily distracted, which to me is always a sign that I'm not really getting into something!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    An enjoyable send up of mental health institutions, bureaucracy generally, and government. The narrator, N, is a patient or "client" of a day mental health hospital -- she spends her days there, but lives in her own apartment. The story she tells is of a new patient named Poppy Shakespeare who arrives in the hospital insisting that nothing is wrong and that she's being unfairly forced into treatment. The narrative style is somewhat stream-of-consciousness (and a "mentally ill" consciousness at that), but it manages to work reasonably well most of the time. N is a classic unreliable narrator -- it's clear from the beginning that the reader is going to need to figure out the "facts" through the lens of a somewhat twisted and self-centered narrator. Those offended by curse words should avoid this book as the f-bomb is dropped repeatedly. Overall, the author manages to do a good job of expressing the frustration with the system experienced by its patients and the stupidity of certain programs.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This story is set in a North London psychiatric hospital and is narrated by N who has been a day patient for thirteen years and whose main objective is to remain a patient. Poppy Shakespeare arrives one day insistent that she shouldn't be there. N who has been asked to show her round agrees to help her. It took me a long time to settle into this book. I didn't like the writing style and N's strange use of language is a bit irritating. However, by the end, I found that I was really quite moved and disturbed by it and the issues it throws up remained in my thoughts long after I finished the book.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    You have to be able to read some badly written dialogue to get through this book. Was 'N' meant to speak like that or is it the author's awful writing style - I wasn't sure. It did make for a difficult read so be fully prepared for this. Anyway I trudged through this book and it was a trudge because nothing was interesting. It was okay because it was good to see a patient's perspective as a service user. Having not read 'One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest' I'm unable to comment on the comparisons. The characters are difficult to get a feel for. I did enjoy reading about the hospital and her thoughts on the doctors; likewise her description of the other patients is funny and who knows but maybe they are accurate. It was the description of the two main characters that was lacking. I was bitterly disappointed as I'd been so looking forward to reading this. But sadly I won't be picking up anything else she writes. It could've been cut down quite a bit. The premis for the novel is fabulous and like I say, I'd been eagerly awaiting the reading of this. Sadly it wasn't one for me.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Creepy yet hilarious story set in a mental institution. The narrator, N, has been in and out of institutions all her life, and intends to stay that way. Poppy is new, and insists there's nothing wrong with her. It gets pretty dark towards the end.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Whilst certainly interesting to see Mental Health services from a service user's POV I did find that after a while the character of Poppy began to grate on me and made me take my focus off of the story. I can't help feeling that perhaps Allan was trying just a little bit *too* hard. Having said that the whole thing surrounding the issuing of 'mad money' (presumably DLA) had the surreal tinge of real life about it; 'you have 'x' days to appeal against your appeal' etc. etc. Interesting book nevertheless although not sure about the ending. I guess in the end it's all a matter of perception...

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Poppy Shakespeare - Clare Allan

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