First Person Shooter
by Cameron Raynes (MidnightSun Publishing) PB RRP $24.99, also available as an
ebook ISBN 978 1925227079
Reviewed by Dianne Bates
This is MidnightSun Publishing’s first foray into cross-over
fiction, described by Books+Publishing as ‘a slice of Australian Gothic’, with
comparisons made to the works of Craig Silvey, Tim Winton and John Marsden, all
of which must be encouraging for first time novelist Raynes.
First Person Shooter
is told in first person by an interesting and likeable teenager, Jayden, who
stutters, an affliction which causes him much embarrassment, to speak
infrequently, and to become a keen listener and observer. Jayden lives with his
dad and his aged dog, Charlie; he’s addicted to Xbox games, is a hard worker on
his family orchard, and has a part-time job in a butcher’s. His best friend is
the fatherless Shannon, whose mum Madeleine is in prison as a result of
murdering her former partner, Terry.
This is a novel that strongly features a wide range of men
from the feral and criminal to the average bloke. There is nothing pretentious
or eccentric about the book’s characters as one often sees in current YA
novels. Through Jayden’s intelligent eyes, Raynes writes about real characters
one comes across in day-to-day life – characters you feel you might know, and
some of them intimately. They are all strongly realised, even minor characters,
like Jayden’s neighbour Nigel, an ex-bikie and Vietnam vet who is dying of
liver failure, Roger the butcher with a lewd and suggestive mouth, Uncle Craig,
a former soldier in Afghanistan and Dad’s brother. And then there’s Shannon,
whose smile Jayden describes as ‘like a little bomb of goodness (that) has gone
off inside her and everything about her glows.’
Told in sections, each representing a day of the week, and
then six months later, the book concerns itself with maleness, soldiering,
guns, butchering, bullying, assaults and more that imbues the story with a
strong sense of testosterone-filled action. Caught with ammunition at school,
Jayden is suspended. What follows is Madeleine’s released from prison and, at
the same time, a local drug war. There is much suspense as the reader wonders
if Madeleine’s sociopathic stepson will seek revenge for his father’s death.
This is an event-filled book which deals with many themes: death,
family disintegration, friendship and loyalty, all happening in a small country
town which is vividly realised. And, too, there are many memorable images
created, for instance, a scene that perfectly captures the sheer terror Jayden
experiences when he is asked to read in class (‘what I was going to say
slouches off and dies somewhere inside me’) and ‘old memories, rubbed smooth by
holding them too long in my head.’
Cameron Raynes and his publisher ought to feel pleased with
this novel. It has a unique and compelling voice, one which isn’t often
explored in YA literature. No doubt it will be short-listed for, or win awards.
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