Malorie Blackman is a prolific writer with great incite. I had been trying to coax her on my sons for years. It was only after I listened to Noughts and Crosses (what they call Tic Tac Toe in England), that I realized that she is largely a young adult writer. They were too young and too male. Although, it was only ever Pig-Heart Boy that I was trying to get them to read.
Let me begin by saying that I have not made as many unnecessary car journeys as I have done in the past two weeks, in order to listen to this audio CD in my car. Only when I was doing research into Ms Blackman that I found out, to my great relief, that it is the first in a trilogy. I can only imagine that Malorie was as in love with her characters as I was and just couldn't let them go.
Noughts and Crosses is a clever role reversal book. It is about a world run by black people where whites are second class citizens, as blacks were in apartheid run South Africa. The story is narrated by Sephy (Nina Sosanya) who is a privileged daughter of a politician and Callum (Nigel Greaves) a nought, surrounded by poverty and strife. The story alternates between the two first person narrators, telling the story of their interwoven lives.
The shocking thing for me was that evening in an audio book, where Callum sounds just like a white South African, I still had trouble keeping him white in my mind's eye. I am a victim of a racist society. I would not consider myself a racist and yet, deep inside I am clearly and profoundly effected by it. I suppose we all are. Blackman throws in little nuggets such as only brown plasters available, someone asking a white person what he name means.
My eleven year old son noticed how engrossed I was in the story and he picked up the book and tore threw it. He loved it and began to listen to the story with me when we were in the car alone. I saw him put his hands over his ears during a sex scene. There are only two but they are passionate and I suppose, unnecessary to him. That is not to say, they were unnecessary to the plot. Far from it.
On balance, I think this book, listened to or read, is suitable for 14 year olds and up. It is very well read, exciting, un-put-downable.
I just noticed that Noughts and Crosses is going to be performed in December by the Royal Shakespeare Society!
Posted by: Emily Marbach | June 26, 2007 at 11:43 AM