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Too True, Blake Morrison (1998)
Granta Pulications 1 862072426 Paperback 237pp £7.99
A collection of pieces by one of the UK's most poetic writers
- worth seeking out for the short story and the article about cycling

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There is no shortage of cyclists who have turned their hands to writing.
Morrison, by contrast is a writer who did not learn to ride a bike until
his late twenties. The joy he experiences riding around costal Suffolk
is powerfully evoked in this piece - that was originally written for a
1996 BBC radio series 'Better Than Sex', and published in a slightly different
form to that in this book by The Guardian in July of that year.
Were you trying to persuade a non-cycling friend of the joy of two wheels,
it would be hard to find 2,500 more persuasive words. Like many others,
Morrison works hard to define what he calls 'the sensuous, hedonistic,
self-forgetful experience' of riding a bike. It is a glorious incantation,
as is his palpable enthusiasm for Suffolk's lesser known thoroughfares.
Just as good is his tale of the theft of his son's bike close by their
home in south London. It could be taken as a modern-day reworking of De
Sica's Bicycle Thieves.
The bike disappears from close by Morrison's middle-class home and disappears
into a neighbouring dystopian local authority development populated by
proletarian grotesques. Trying to do his fatherly duty, Morrison goes
through absurd contortions, moral and physical, to retrieve his son's
wheels. It is a telling tale and an all-too-familiar slice of family life
in a major metropolis.
Like all collections of journalism, the quality isn't completely consistent
in the rest of the book which ranges over subjects as varied subjects
as students, pornography and Alan Bennett. Nonetheless, Morrisson is beyond
doubt, a compelling writer. He is at his most riveting when he is mining
his own childhood, and there is plenty of that here, whatever his subject.
PS Jan 10
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