Books

Tim Finch, Peace Talks; A Girl’s Life, Annie Ernaux

The petty squabbles of conflict resolution bring humour to an emotionally grave subject in Tim Finch’s new novel, says Jane Graham

In his first, well received, satirical novel The House of Journalists, campaigner/reporter Tim Finch exploited his intimate knowledge of the refugee experience to create an insider’s fiction more illuminating than his any of his justly admired factual accounts. I don’t know if he spent his years garnering plaudits for his work as director of the Refugee Council and senior political journalist at the BBC secretly nurturing a literary desire, but I’m grateful he found the time. Many contemporary British news journalists have ventured into novel territory, but while I enjoyed Kirsty Wark’s The House by the Loch and acknowledge that Frank Gardner’s is thrillers are best sellers, Finch has channeled his understanding of current affairs into fiction more successfully than most. With his second novel, Peace Talks, he has surpassed the achievement of his excellent debut to create something insightful, emotionally resonant and unexpectedly poetic.

1406_books_PeaceTalks

At the centre of Peace Talks is Edvard Behrens, a highly respected diplomat who specialises in international peace negotiations. He has been sent to a hotel in the Tyrol to arbitrate a deal between two warring Middle Eastern factions and fills his day easing them masterfully towards an agreement, while his evenings are spent making small talk with colleagues and devouring his balcony view of ‘rooftops, snowfields, forest and mountains, twilit by a sky that is a deepening blue and orange bruise.’

Peace Talks is full of terrible details of brutality in battle, in love and in death. Yet it is consistently a pleasure to read

The engagingly informal prose – his account is a one-sided conversation with his wife Anna – slips smoothly from matter-of-fact descriptions of wartime atrocities to tender reminiscences of his time with the absent Anna. The infantile pettiness which characterises his tippy-toed mediation meetings is often very funny (there is a hint of Monty Python and Chris Morris in the points-scoring squabbles over the angles of the window blinds); that it doesn’t jar with what increasingly becomes a profound meditation on memory, loss, and the agony of grief is a mark of Finch’s management of tone. 

The novel is full of terrible details of brutality in battle, in love and in death. Yet it is consistently a pleasure to read. And unusually and best of all, it doesn’t blow it in the denouement. It never over-explains, or exhausts its own metaphors, or enforces a false sense of closure. In fact the final few pages are a brilliant coincidental summation of the shock and adapt reality we’re living in right now. We could all do with reading it.

1406_books_A-Girls-story

French writer Annie Ernaux is equally compelled by memory, having virtually created a genre in her mixture of mind/body memoir and story-telling (it sounds obvious now, but Ernaux was mastering this approach decades before Eimear McBride or Sinéad Gleeson came along). A Girl’s Life sees her return to a formative teenage summer, when she lost her virginity in a rather commonplace experience shared by millions of teenage girls who, like her, are likely to have avoided its recollection ever since. Ernaux finally turns to face it – the embarrassment of her naive trust in an older men, her eager capitulation to him, and her shock in being suddenly casually supplanted.

With a peculiar combination of scholarly consideration and maternal affection Ernaux acknowledges her discarded 18 year old self’s place in the make-up of the woman she has become. Few living writers have exploited this form as effectively; Ernaux does for the internal memory what Svetlana Alexievich has done for the social memory. Quite a feat.

Peace Talks, by Tim Finch, is out now (Bloomsbury, £16.99)

A Girl’s Life, by Annie Ernaux, is out now (Fitzcarraldo, £10.99)

Support the Big Issue

For over 30 years, the Big Issue has been committed to ending poverty in the UK. In 2024, our work is needed more than ever. Find out how you can support the Big Issue today.
Vendor martin Hawes

Recommended for you

View all
Top 5 children's books set on islands, selected by children's author Lucy Strange 
Books

Top 5 children's books set on islands, selected by children's author Lucy Strange 

Why AI quiz makers like ChatGPT are no match for human ingenuity  
Artificial intelligence

Why AI quiz makers like ChatGPT are no match for human ingenuity  

Prospect Cottage: See inside artist Derek Jarman's seaside home for the first time
Photography

Prospect Cottage: See inside artist Derek Jarman's seaside home for the first time

Weighted Down: The Complicated Life of Skip Spence review – sensitive portrait of a free spirit
Books

Weighted Down: The Complicated Life of Skip Spence review – sensitive portrait of a free spirit

Most Popular

Read All
Renters pay their landlords' buy-to-let mortgages, so they should get a share of the profits
Renters: A mortgage lender's window advertising buy-to-let products
1.

Renters pay their landlords' buy-to-let mortgages, so they should get a share of the profits

Exclusive: Disabled people are 'set up to fail' by the DWP in target-driven disability benefits system, whistleblowers reveal
Pound coins on a piece of paper with disability living allowancve
2.

Exclusive: Disabled people are 'set up to fail' by the DWP in target-driven disability benefits system, whistleblowers reveal

Cost of living payment 2024: Where to get help now the scheme is over
next dwp cost of living payment 2023
3.

Cost of living payment 2024: Where to get help now the scheme is over

Strike dates 2023: From train drivers to NHS doctors, here are the dates to know
4.

Strike dates 2023: From train drivers to NHS doctors, here are the dates to know