Five Miles from Outer Hope

by Nicola Barker

On This Page

Description

An instant classic of teenage self-discovery by prize-winning Nicola Barker, an  "anarchic and lovingly perverse writer" (Ali Smith)   Summer, 1981. Medve, sixteen years old and six foot three in her crocheted stockings, is marooned in a semi-derelict hotel on a tiny island off the coast of Devon, England. There's nothing to do but paint novelty mugs, dream of literary murders, and despair of her gothically unprepossessing family--including Mo, her sex toy-inventing mother; Poodle, her show more shamefully flat-chested sister; and four-year-old Feely, who wants to grow up to be a bulimic. Until one day a ginger-headed stranger arrives . . .   One of our most enjoyably unconventional contemporary writers, Nicola Barker, roots out the darkly surreal in a forgotten corner of the world. Five Miles from Outer Hope is a startling, luminous book, and Medve's voice speaks bluntly from the heart, with results that are original and poignant. show less

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

7 reviews
All you need to know about this book can probably be summed up in the first sentence: "It was during those boiled-dry, bile-ridden, shit-ripped, god-forsaken early-bird years of the nineteen eighties". If that makes you smile, you'll probably enjoy the rest of it. If it makes you roll your eyes, then you might as well stop reading there.

Medve, the narrator of this book, is a smart but self-conscious sixteen-year-old with a gothically weird family. The action, such as it is, takes place in June 1981, as Medve attempts to look after her disintegrating family (although she's a bit too self-centred to notice what's really going on) and flirts and fights with a "skinny, self-centred, stupid, impolitic m------f------r" of a deserter from the show more South African army.

But the story is not really the point - it's Medve's voice that the book focuses on. Barker hits the tone perfectly - just the right mixture of pretentiousness and hostility. I spent a little while wondering what the book was actually about, but then I stopped worrying and decided to enjoy the ride.
show less
½
Story of a Cornish summer, told by a 16 year old girl and set in 1981. Although I was that age in that year, her character, style, family and life could hardly be more different.

She is the middle of 5 children in a hippie, semi-nomadic family, with many strange quirks, some individual and some shared. She is a giant, her father almost a dwarf (or whatever is the PC term), her mother is away, and a weird South African lad comes to stay. It is supposedly about their teenage flirtation, but it's wider than that. She has a very "in your face" but conversational style which is meant to sound authentic, but I found rather irritating and overdone.

I didn't warm to any of the characters and even allowing for the context and setting, found the show more whole thing too ludicrous to be credible or very interesting. Fortunately it doesn't take long to read! show less
Ok this novel really deserves a 3 1/2. I toyed with giving it four stars but it wasn't quite there. Barker's writing style is still fantastic but the story isn't as bizarre and enchanting as Darkmans. In a way, this is more like a weird feminine John Irving-esque sort of novel where the British family of misfits are all named after Thurber dogs and seem like the kind of people who will always struggle to find their place in this world. While the mother goes galavanting across American prisons marketing her anal probe, the rest of the family in England houses a South African who doesn't want to serve in the military. This is set in the 80s and the plot really centers around this farcical series of tricks played upon the guest and the show more main character. It's fun but it doesn't leave your head spinning with quite the same vigor as I'd like. show less
Five Miles From Outer Hope is technically not my type of book but I first read it when I was 14 and it's stuck with me since. It's the book I read every few months. It's my go to comforter when I'm in a bad mood. This is the book that makes everything better. For me, that is. I love it.
Was expecting Hotel New Hampshire but got Catcher in the Rye

Members

Recently Added By

Author Information

Picture of author.
23+ Works 2,966 Members
Nicola Barker is a Senior Lecturer at Kent Law School, University of Kent, UK.

Some Editions

Gilbert, Catherine (Translator)

Common Knowledge

Original title
Five Miles from Outer Hope
Original publication date
2000

Classifications

Genres
General Fiction, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR6052 .A64876 .F5Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1961-2000
BISAC

Statistics

Members
134
Popularity
243,115
Reviews
5
Rating
½ (3.45)
Languages
5 — Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
9
ASINs
2