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On Bended Knees
A perceptive,
moving novel. Martin Goodman takes fierce delight in cutting through the
easy cliches about the "new" Europe. ~ Christopher Hope
A first novel
of deceptive simplicity, which casts an absorbed and occasionally chilling
eye over the complexities of family life, national identity and the horrors
of recent European history. ~ D.J.Taylor
Goodman's quirky
first novel heralds a new dawn for British writing. ~ Malcolm Handley,
Daily Post
This excellent
first novel's central character is so completely realised he could have
walked out of one of those enigmatic Bruce Chatwin pieces about old mysterious
European types. Its basic, simplistic construction combines notions of
guilt, memory, family and love into a book that's built to last long after
the sell-by date of most first novels. I would be surprised if this didn't
turn out to be one of the most promising debuts of the year. ~ David Darby,
Time Out
The best debut
is ON BENDED KNEES, Martin Goodman's quirkily charming novel that interweaves
a young man's search for selfhood in provincial Britain with the mysteries
of his mother's German past. ~ Natasha Walker, Vogue
The novel's blunt,
no-frills economy is part of its charm. Goodman writes with flare and
panache, and the narrative fizzes along. Goodman's novel soars. ~ Michael
Wright, The Times
ON BENDED KNEES
is a professional combination of rite-of-passage novel and cultural quest.
The troubled half-German adolescent hero, Tomas, goes to stay with relatives
in Berlin, following the disturbing death of his father. That city is
brilliantly seen through the hero's eyes, as is the character who effectively
steals the novel, the blind and autocratic Herr Poppel. The novel comes
most to life when Tomas and Poppel are taking their walks around the divided
city's streets and parks, the older man dispensing the secrets of longevity,
the younger man hesitantly challenging him on the implications of his
cast-iron pronouncements and their relation to Germany's guilty past.
A very impressive debut. ~ Colin Donald, The Scotsman
... After Collins's
gut-scraping poteen, the emotional tact of Martin Goodman's ON BENDED
KNEES slips down like a milky cuppa. Yet Goodman's plot unfolds against
a backcloth of even deeper red. Tomas grows up with his German mother
in the postwar Midlands, a place of oozing war-wounds where a gung-ho
film or a World Cup tie can split his heart in two. "We carry old deaths
within us," warns his dying teacher and Tomas must turn pilgrim in Dresden
to make peace with his family's past. This quiet and subtle study of reconciliation
tends to stick with English understatement and eschew German grandeur.
No matter, Britain has squads of youngish writers trained to squeeze the
last drop of moral juice out of the Second World War and its aftermath.
It takes a braver soul, like Goodman, to hint that postwar babes should
try instead to lay these ghosts to rest. ~ Boyd Tomkin, The Observer
ON BENDED KNEES
is puzzling at first, because Tomas, who wants to tell his own story with
proper attention - 'on bended knees' - seems to have very little personality,
or even particular preference. But you come to see that he is conserving
himself deliberately against the old suffering, the tired old guilt of
the adults. He is biding his time. DJ Taylor has called ON BENDED KNEES
"deceptively simple", but I can't see what's deceptive about it. Simplicity
is a great virtue, in novels as elsewhere. After all, it can only be produced
from sincerity. ~ Penelope Fitzgerald, The Evening Standard
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