Newsnight Review discussed the novel Doing It by Melvin Burgess.
(Edited highlights of the panel's review)
ROSIE BOYCOTT:
I thought he was very right to do it. It
was a fabulous book. Obviously I never
was a teenage boy! But it's one of those...
MARK LAWSON:
Confession night tonight!
ROSIE BOYCOTT:
You always heard that kind of thing that
boys do think a lot about this stuff, and it's
clear from this book just how much boys
do think about it. But I liked the fact very
much that there is also a kind of responsibility
in there, how they dealt with the girls. There
was a kind of adulthood in them. It was
especially touching the way the boy really
loves the girl who is a bit fat, and the girl
who is a bit fat is depressed about the fact
that she is fat. You get into all of that. It was
very touching, the scene with the teacher,
how he's desperate to try to get away from
her, but he's also aware of the power that
she has. I thought it had hundreds of
wonderful themes in it. You were there
in that chaotic party, where your family's
house is being trashed and people are
vomiting on your parents' sheets and
what do you do about it. It was a
wonderful book. It's naive to think that
people don't discuss this sort of stuff. I
read Lady Chatterley's Lover by torch
light under the covers...
MARK LAWSON:
Will, he is 50 next year, but it can be
queasy when men that age write about
teenagers?
WILL SELF:
I think he has a bit of a problem - I don't
think he got the age register quite right. For
me, this was the sensibility, the sort of
puerile smutty talk about sex was what I
remember from being around 14 or 15,
and these are meant to be 17-year-old lads.
What he also can't get is the cultural reference.
Adolescence is absolutely preoccupied by
the minutiae of pop music, film, clothing,
style. Clearly, he can't get it. In a sense,
all hats off to him for not even attempting
it. Much better to leave it alone. But I
suspect that, for the teenage reader, it
makes the whole thing seem exactly what
the didacs on the illiberal side would claim
the book isn't doing. I would suspect teenagers
feel quite preached to by this kind of literature.
It's about responsibility and behaving yourself.
MARK KERMODE:
I was a teenage boy and I don't recognise
myself in this at all. My problem with it, I
agree with Will, is that it doesn't read to me
like the words of a 17-year-old. It reads like
the words of a 40-year-old attempting to do
an impression of a 17-year-old. In much the
way Larry Clarke's film Kids was a film about
a 65-year-old man about, "Hey, this is what
your kids are doing." and I'm very down with
them. There has to be a way of addressing it,
but I don't think he has found it. His motives
are honourable, but at the end of it I felt rather
creepy.
ROSIE BOYCOTT:
Will's point is really good. The sense of the
cultural reference and what people were
wearing, and the importance of that, is not
there, and that Burgess clearly realises, I
assume, that he can't do it, and therefore it
will lack a kind of truth. Maybe to some
extent he has written it for people like me,
who are fascinated by that kind of period.