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Jenni Fagan

Forfatter af The Panopticon

14+ Værker 1,453 Medlemmer 142 Anmeldelser

Om forfatteren

Includes the name: Jenni Fagan

Værker af Jenni Fagan

The Panopticon (2012) 652 eksemplarer
The Sunlight Pilgrims (2016) 420 eksemplarer
Luckenbooth (2021) 243 eksemplarer
Hex (2022) 104 eksemplarer
TRUTH (2019) 3 eksemplarer
Urchin Belle (2009) 2 eksemplarer
The Bone Library (2022) 2 eksemplarer
Les Buveurs de lumière (2019) 1 eksemplar

Associated Works

Best of British Fantasy 2018 (2019) — Bidragyder — 32 eksemplarer
Year's Best Weird Fiction, Vol. 5 (2018) — Bidragyder — 26 eksemplarer

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If anyone should be damaged, it's Anais Hendricks, the teenage heroine of Jenni Fagan's The Panopticon. Born in a mental hospital to a woman who disappeared soon afterward, she's shuffled through dozens of placements by the time we meet her as a 15 year-old getting shoved into the back of a police car with blood all over her, not able to remember what just happened. What she does know is that a policewoman is in a coma and that she's being blamed for it, and that she's headed toward a group home for wayward youth called the Panopticon. As Anais settles in and gets to know the staff and residents, we learn more and more about her background, about the places that she's lived and the ways (sex and drugs, mostly) that she's tried to escape and find a little happiness for herself. Even as she gets more comfortable, though, there's a constant axe hanging over her head, since she knows if the injured policewoman takes a turn for the worse she'll be sent to a secure facility to be under constant lock and key.

The book takes place in Scotland, and Fagan peppers the dialogue with dialect. It's a little hard to wrap your head around at first if that's not something you're used to, but it's pretty easy to tell what the words mean by context clues and after a while it becomes part of the rhythm of the novel. The plot itself is slightly off-kilter in a way that fits the story being told...there's a pretty clear "peak" near the middle of the plot after which things begin to fall apart, but there's not really a climax per se. And the people it shines a light on, teens that have lived through the kind of horrifying conditions that leave them in a group home, don't really have lives that follow the linear path we might expect either. There's a lot of very dark stuff here: drug abuse, rape, disease, cutting, parental abandonment, death, but it somehow comes together to end on a surprisingly hopeful note.

What really shines in The Panopticon is the characterization, especially of Anais. At first she's an off-putting character, a violent and drug-addled teenager who seems practically feral and certainly dangerous. But as her layers get peeled back, you come to see how her life has necessitated the hard shell she wears around herself and why she acts the way she does. Slowly, you begin to care about her and root for her and by the time there's a court proceeding where she's dismissed as a hopeless case who can never be trusted to live outside of custody you're offended by how smugly they assume they've seen all they need to know about her. Many of the other kids and some of the staff in the Panopticon are given strong personalities despite relatively little "page time", so to speak, but Anais is a bold and surprisingly winning heroine. As long as you can deal with the rough places the book goes, I'd definitely recommend it. Please don't do what I did originally, though, and assume it's YA. It is very much a book for a more mature audience.
… (mere)
 
Markeret
ghneumann | 38 andre anmeldelser | Jun 14, 2024 |
I was so excited by the plot but I can't enjoy this style of writing; it's too disjointed and choppy for my tastes.
1 stem
Markeret
fionaanne | 2 andre anmeldelser | Nov 16, 2023 |

Pa`nop´ti`con ( noun). A circular prison with cells so constructed that the prisoners can be observed at all times. [Greek panoptos 'seen by all']
Anais Hendricks, fifteen, is in the back of a police car, headed for the Panopticon, a home for chronic young offenders. She can't remember the events that led her here, but across town a policewoman lies in a coma and there is blood on Anais's school uniform. Smart, funny and fierce, Anais is a counter-culture outlaw, a bohemian philosopher in sailor shorts and a pillbox hat. She is also a child who has been let down, or worse, by just about every adult she has ever met.

The residents of the Panopticon form intense bonds, heightened by their place on the periphery, and Anais finds herself part of an ad-hoc family there.

Much more suspicious are the social workers, especially Helen, who is about to leave her job for an elephant sanctuary in India but is determined to force Anais to confront the circumstances of her birth before she goes. Looking up at the watchtower that looms over the residents, Anais knows her fate: she is part of an experiment, she always was, it's a given, a liberty - a fact. And the experiment is closing in.


Received in ebook format from the publishers via www.netgalley.com

This is not what I expected it to be, and in a good way. Set somewhere in Scotland, the 15 year old Anais is on her way to the Panopticon, a children's unit, whilst a police woman is in a coma in hospital, having been koshed around the head. Everyone belives that Anais did it and it's just a case of proving it.

Anais has been a damaged child from the beginning, having been born to an unnamed mother, who promptly fled the scene. She's been in care ever since and has been from pillar to post, rarely finding stability and friends. She has however, found drugs, drink, prostitution, underage sex, and violence, and her most frequent boyfriend is in jail, desperate for cash to pay off some debts.

In the Panopticon she finds some of what she needs, in the friendships she finds there, mainly in the other girls, all of whom are as equally damaged. Every step of the way however, Anais feels she is being watched by those in the Watchtower and being followed by those performing the Experiment. Her struggle to make some sense of her world means she attempts to reinvent herself, with her ideal of living in Paris one of her favourites.

This is not a book for the easily offended or of a nervous disposition. There is a LOT of swearing (including words I'd never heard before in those chosen combinations). There are "trigger" situations that some people may struggle with. The book is a 1st person narrative of a 15 year old Scottish lass, so an understanding of Scottish (Glasgow?) dialect will make it easier to read.

I rarely give 5 stars to any book, but I cant think of a reason not to give it one.
… (mere)
 
Markeret
nordie | 38 andre anmeldelser | Oct 14, 2023 |

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Værker
14
Also by
2
Medlemmer
1,453
Popularitet
#17,687
Vurdering
½ 3.6
Anmeldelser
142
ISBN
50
Sprog
3

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