|
Book Review - Faceless by Martina
Cole
Martina Cole is one of my favourite authors and in this review
you will find out what I think of the novel Faceless and the
characters.
Marie Carter who used to be a drug addict and a prostitute has
just been released after serving 12 years in prison for killing
her two best friends. She doesn't remember committing the
crime, all she remembers is arguing with her friends and waking
up from a drugged stupor to find them dead and with their blood
all over her, but drugs take you out of it don't they. She
knows that she must have committed the crime, her fingerprints
were on the murder weapon and 12 long years inside beating
herself up mentally about the murders changes Marie.
Before she was wild, out of control. Now in her early thirties
she is calmer, more reflective and filled with sorrow at the
years lost away from her two children Jason and Tiffany. Nobody
visited Marie or wrote to her. The lack of contact with the
outside world and her family make the real world an even
stranger place than it would be if she had contact with
others.
The first thing that she does is to visit the home of her
family. Her mother Louise answers the door and nastily tells
her to go away, she doesn’t want to see her again and blames
Marie for all of the families troubles including the suicide of
her younger brother Marshall after the murders. Marie’s younger
sister Lucy is almost as vindictive and unforgiving as her
mother; she has always been jealous of her more attractive
older sister and wants nothing to do with her either. Kevin,
Marie’s father is different, he loves his daughter and has
missed her. He wants to see her but knows that if his wife and
other daughter find out they will make his life even more
miserable than it is.
Marie is out on licence, she has to live in a hostel and there
is a 6.30 curfew initially. In her new life she must be careful
not to get involved or associated with any crime, one slip up
and she goes back to jail to complete her life term. With no
family support, no idea where her children are and little hopes
of getting a job and a life Marie’s release is a miserable
affair.
She hopes that her children were raised in good homes and have
a better chance in life than she had. The social services
inform her that 15 year old Jason is happy and well cared for
but has refused to see her. Marie then visits an old friend and
cajoles her into taking her to see her 17 year old daughter.
She is full of sorrow to find that Tiffany is following in her
footsteps as a crack dependent prostitute and has a baby girl
called Anastasia. Marie’s joy at seeing her daughter after all
of those years is dispelled when Tiffany shows hatred towards
her and tells her to stay away.
The only good thing about Marie’s bleak homecoming is a
surprise offer of a job in the office at a scrap yard. She
takes it but soon starts to realise that there are dodgy goings
on that could send her straight back to prison just by
association.
The shit really hits the fan when Marie discovers that the
father of her granddaughter is pimp Patrick Connor who is also
the father of Marie’s son Jason. Patrick was instrumental in
introducing Marie to drugs and prostitution and it soon becomes
clear that he has deliberately done the same with her
daughter.
That’s enough of the storyline of this hard to put down novel.
As with Broken, another book that I’ve read from this author it
is well written and absorbed me from the start. Martina Cole
writes it seems knowledgably about London gangland, corruption
and drug dealing but makes you feel a barrage of different
emotions towards the characters.
In Broken there was an unusually large amount of characters to
keep track of. The same happens in Faceless but there was no
confusion for me with either book. Some writers wouldn’t be
able to get away with that but perhaps it works for Martina
Cole because she invents characters with sufficiently
distinctive traits and personalities to make them
memorable.
I found myself feeling sorry for Marie and others like her who
have served long sentences and emerge supposedly rehabilitated
to find rejection and nothing waiting for them. That surprised
me, I had never thought about what it was like before, just
felt slightly uncomfortable around those who have served
sentences for murder.
Because there is a tendency to blame the murders on drugs, the
novel made me consider my feelings about drug crimes and
leniency often asked for diminished responsibility. We know
that somebody who is crazed with drugs doesn’t know what they
are doing and isn’t responsible for their actions but when we
are on moral high ground we consider that they know before they
take drugs that they can get out of control. Therefore the
responsibility comes with the action of taking drugs and not
the state of mind while on them. If a crime is committed while
under the influence of drink no leniency is expected but I
wonder if that is a strong enough comparison.
I liked this character despite her having been convicted for
such a violent crime. I could feel the uncertainty and
loneliness of this quiet self-contained killer. I could
understand why she is controlled and how her years inside have
made her turn within herself. I felt sad for her when her
family rejected her and that she has to try and live her life
with the knowledge that she is despised and hated by most of
those who knew her before the murders. I could feel her pain
when her beloved son refused to see her and her sorrow at
seeing what is happening to her daughter but being helpless to
do anything about it. Worse still would be the mixture of
anguish and hatred felt towards Patrick Connor, the man who is
corrupting her daughter.
Patrick is one mean lowlife, despised by other gangsters and
feared by most. A charmer when he wants to be but really a
violent man who prides himself on being a nutter. He hates
women and enjoys taking young girls and ruining them. He feeds
them with drugs and gradually lowers their self-esteem until
they prostitute themselves to line his fat wallet. I disliked
this character immensely and hoped right from the beginning
that he would be stopped from ruining any more lives. Although
he has escaped capture for years through intimidation and
bribery I felt that this character was too open in his dealings
and wouldn't be intelligent enough to get away with it for so
long in real life. Maybe the openness was there to make the
reader dislike him further for his arrogance.
Louise Carter is a bitterly twisted unhappy woman who rules the
home through meanness and nastiness and misguidedly cares too
much about what the neighbours think rather than her family.
She only ever loved her dead son and showed from their birth
that she never wanted or cared for her two daughters. It’s easy
to see how after growing up in an uncaring environment Marie
could have so little self esteem that she would turn to drugs
and prostitution. Lucy is the good daughter who stays out of
trouble and still lives with her parents at 30. She isn’t happy
though and has grown almost as mean and jealous as her mother.
I couldn’t feel sorry for Louise or Lucy knowing that happiness
comes from caring about and not hurting others around you.
Marie’s father Kevin lets his wife order him around and puts up
with her ways for a quiet life. He comes across as weak to
start with, he watched his wife treat his daughters badly while
they were growing up but didn’t do anything about it. Despite
that I felt for and liked this character and hoped that
eventually he would find the strength to defy his wife and
start to do what he wanted and what was right.
There are lots of twists and turns to this story, it can be
emotional but it does contain some quite harrowing, stomach
churning descriptions of violence. There were a few surprises
along the way and I enjoyed being kept in suspense until the
end to discover what happened. I wanted the story to continue
and to find out if Marie could make a decent life for herself
with so much against it. As the author has previously produced
series I’m hoping that there will be at least one sequel to
Faceless.
by Patricia Jones - 9th September 2003
Back
to Top
Patricia has been writing articles and reviews for many years.
You can view more of her work, submit articles and find
articles for reprint at her Article Directory BB Articles and find
some great free advice about writing at the Make Money From Writing
website.
Submit travel reviews and find free
travel articles at Articles Abroad
Review Source:
http://www.creativewriter.me.uk
|