There’s an old idiom that states you can’t compare apples to oranges but
in the case of Belinda Webb’s A Clockwork Apple (2008) you
can’t help compare it to Anthony Burgess’ A Clockwork Orange,
purely because it follows the source so closely. However, there are wholesale
changes for the sake of parody, notably the inversion of genders, so that
rather than teenage boys running amok, Webb’s dystopia is populated by teenage
girls.
Alex, and her three Grrrlz - Petra, Georgia, and Mid (”Mid being really
mid”) - live in Moss Side, a deprived area in the city of Manchester, referred
to as Madchester. The people are weaned on addiction therapy, shown on the
Recovery Channel, and left without the opportunities that the middle classes,
nicknamed the Blytons, are privy to. So, as teenagers are wont to do, they lash
out in anger, doling out beatings and kicking in windows with their ballet
pumps:
…we aren’t sponsored by the state to fight, only by our own H.P.’s [higher
powers]- to fight to honour our Phrontisteries. Or, at the very least, to
avenge the dismissal and frustration of said Phrontisteries.
The obvious target of Alex’s rage takes in the current fascination with
the world of celebrity:
Most of our fellow Gutshot Rebos patrons, girlies and boys alike, are
loafing around reading, not proper stuff, but looking at
pictures, tabloid barathrums that they are, like theyz still in the ickle
wickle nursery school. Theyz hypnotised by pictures of girls and boys who
have made itand who are saying with their new capped smiles,
‘Look at me, aren’t I clever, don’t you want what I’ve got?‘
The “proper stuff” is what marks Alex out from the rest. Where A
Clockwork Orange’s Alex would lose himself in classical music, A
Clockwork Apple’s Alex keeps under the bedroom floorboards her “stash
of mind power” - books. In literature she plays with Nietzschean aphorisms, or
references the likes of Raymond Carver, Richard Yates, and Jack London. But it
all seems little more than name-dropping as, while Alex may revere them, they
don’t seem to have enhanced her character in any way. Indeed, it seems strange
that someone smart enough to enjoy literature should speak in such a way. Where
Burgess plundered the Russian language for his nadsat, Alex’s voice
is a tiring concoction of urban slang, obscure words, and something approaching
nursery rhyme patois, all punctuated with, or variations thereof, braying
laughter: hee hee haw haw. If this is how the smart ones talk, then
Webb’s dystopia is certainly a grim future.
After breaking into Mrs Gaskell’s Academy for Girls, Alex finds herself
in prison and with an option to enter a twelve step rehabilitation programme.
This brings up the question of Alex’s anger, of how to accept it and address
it. She’s angry at the state, she’s angry at her drunken mother, she’s angry at
everything, and has chosen to show it:
Coz, you see, inwards meanz you are creating more problems for yourself,
on behalf of THEM, whereas OUTWARDS meanz you’re creating problems for THEM,
where it belongs. Where it longs to be. Depression or expression? Which is it
to be, my dear sistaz? Which?
It’s hard to care about Alex as her opinions on literature come off
quite flat, and her presence lacks a third dimension. As a narrator, however,
she does express a certain flair for the English language, playing with words
and dropping in cultural references, although sometimes dwelling too long that
they become stretched. Sadly, where part of the joy of A Clockwork
Orange was coming across a nadsat word and
understanding it from its context, in A Clockwork Apple referring
to the enclosed glossary is necessary.
Were Alex’s vocabulary relaxed from the tirades of swearing that spew
from her filthy mouth, A Clockwork Apple could perhaps have
cut itself some slack as a teen novel. It’s the book of an author who has
graduated from the nineties and, finding the 21st Century a disappointment,
wants to shout about it. At its heart there’s an obvious love for Burgess’
novel, A Clockwork Apple, shadowing it all the way, with punchy
inversions and sly references. But while oranges are not the only fruit, there
really is no comparison.
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