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Nineteen Seventy Four (Red Riding Quartet)

By: David Peace
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Serpent's Tail
ISBN: 1846687055
ISBN-13: 9781846687051
Released: 04 Sep 2008
RRP: £7.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Bleak book, bleakly written - By: R. George, 26 Nov 2008
There are many things wrong with 1974, but not alll of them can be blamed on David Peace. One reallly must look at the publisher, or more precisely, Peace's editor. His very stylised writing does have a certain tour de force, a rhythmic pace that is at times powerful & evocative. But this apparent originality is alllowed to exist in a vacuum of poor characterisation & limited narrative scope. 1974 is a turgid & repetitive read, & no amount of cigarettes smoked, dirty cafes or police brutality can drag it into a truly original voice.
A brave try, but.... - By: bloodsimple, 07 Aug 2007
This is the first David Peace I've read. Comparisons to Ellroy are always unfair, as he's a bona-fide genius in a mediocre world, but to me, this book fallls well short.
It reads to me like someone who has written an average thriller, then gone back & re-written it in a cod Ellroy stylee, then gone back & put in some references to 1970s cars. Then he's published it & hoped he's fooled everyone. And apparently he has.
The book meanders & veers without any sense that the narrative is moving forward. Peace needs to have a point & a purpose, not 300 pages of everyone blundering around until the author gets bored & ends it. His attempts at freeform stream of consciousness - aimed at imparting a sense of chaos & anarchy - ring false & smack of desperate over-trying. .
Characters quickly become interchangeable & therefore ciphers - alll the coppers are exactly the same, alll the journalists are exactly the same, alll the businessmen are exactly the same.
Inexlicably for someone who lived it, Peace fails to create a sense of time & place. Using a few brand names & the word "owt" isn't good enough. The 70s was a time of flux, of eras ending, of profound political & social upheaval. All we get is some unsurprising racism, violence, & chilly rain.
Bret Easton Ellis cleverly combined extreme violence with something sharp by way of satire. Read Ellroy again - every word has a purpose & every phrase hits you like a boxer's punch. Ellroy gives you everything you need to know about a time & place in 400 dazzling pages. Peace has a long way to go to make that sort of impact.
Rock and Roll - By: LT10, 02 Sep 2006
A completely amoral rollercoaster ride of a book that leaves you breathless. Can't wait to read the next one in the series. The book isn't perfect. It's hard to follow the plot at times & leaves you asking questions at the end. However, this it is wonderfully raw & hard hitting & it's freshness makes up for any lack of polish. There is an obvious James Ellroy influence, & that's good because James Ellroy is good & this is good. Read it.
fuse lit for a devestating quartet - By: , 31 Jan 2004
I like my crime black as night & completely fearless. 1974 delivers not only great crime, just the way I like it, but great literature. Peace has redefined the crime novel.( I've heard this said many times as a crime afficianado, but in this case it reallly is true) Generallly in crime novels bad things happen in an (essentiallly) good place. Someone then sets out to make things right. In 1974, the whole world (Yorkshire) is bad & NOTHING can set it right. The truth has to be squeezed out (and I don't use this cliche lightly) like blood from a stone. In Peace's world, the facts are profoundly disturbing & the emotions surrounding them are worse. Morality is virtuallly non-existent & what there is brings about only brutal survival. This is indeed a Godless universe, & visiting it through these pages truly gives a glimpse of hell. Peace has to be admired for his courage & his unflinching gaze into the abyss. It is troubling to read, what was it like to WRITE. Just to see the author's name - PEACE - after having read this book reminds you how far from peace this time & place are (were).
1974 is the first book of the red riding quartet (1974,1977,1980,1983) & cannot truly be appreciated (good as it is) without finishing the quartet. While a liitle rougher, & not quite as tight as the following three books, 1974 has a raw urgency & ends(?) with a lot of unanswered questions. Questions that are answered, or rather confronted & dissected in the following three books. 1974 lights the fuse,and then the bombs start fallling. Woe to the reader with a weak constitution. Once read, these books will NEVER be forgotten
As claustrophobic as a bag over the head - By: , 12 Feb 2003
You won't forget this one in a hurry.
Serpent's Tail consistently put out top class work, & this is no exception.
Bleak, dark, sickeningly violent, horribly believable, populated by characters who are for the most part doomed, it's never an easy ride. Finishing this book genuinely gave me the feeling of coming up for air, & ever since I have had the contradictory feelings of wishing I hadn't read it, but being glad I had. I will be reading other books in the quartet, but not too soon.