Book Review | Labels and Other Stories | Louis de Bernières

 

Labels and Other Stories by Louis de Bernières

About Author

With an insatiable appetite for other people’s business, Erica James will readily strike up conversation with strangers in the hope of unearthing a useful gem for her writing. She finds it the best way to write authentic characters for her novels, although her two grown-up sons claim they will never recover from a childhood spent in a perpetual state of embarrassment at their mother’s compulsion.

The author of nineteen bestselling novels, and the winner of the 2006 Romantic Novel of the Year Award, Erica divides her time between Suffolk and Lake Como in Italy.


Recap and Review Per Story

1. Labels

The narrator talks about hobbies, and the hobbies that he dabbled with. Eventually, the hobby that he sticks with is: collecting the labels from catfood tins. He goes into great details describing those tins, and the process of removing the label from the tin. Soon, he becomes obsessed. His wife leaves him. He starts travelling overseas to collect European catfood labels, loses his job and his mind.

And then comes a twist that we didn’t see.

The opening of this story immediately pulled me in, with the simple yet captivating (and hilarious, might I add) prose about different people in narrator’s life and their hobbies. The description of catfood tins and their labels never once bored me; although, at one point, I felt yucky. Read the story to know which part it was.


2. Günter Weber’s Confession

This was apparently a continuition to some earlier work and felt a bit out-of-context initially. A hauntingly beautiful story, nonetheless, of guilt and confession.


3. The Turks Are so Wonderful with Children

Oh, the vivid description of Turkish bazaar! Reminded me of all the Turkish drama I’ve watched. The story is about a married couple and their son Vinnie. But he was a difficult child and found they could not cope with his behaviour. The very long description of Vinnie’s “childhood” made me laugh, spit out my tea and also feel extremely sorry for his parents. I particularly loved the doctor who suggested exorcism even though he was an atheist. 

Awesome!!!


4. Stupid Gringo

#relatable as I could completely understand how the main character Jean-Louis Langevin felt about his shitty colleagues (story of my life).

I could see the end from a mile away but still enjoyed the story.


5. Romance on the Underground

The narrator warns a 14-year-old boy by his perpetual adoration of women, and that the boy would definitely undergo the same.


6. Mamacita’s Treasure

Mamacita was an elderly midwife


7. Our Lady of Beauty

Freaky, for sure.


8. The Complete Continent

Father Alfonsin believed that it was a wife’s duty to have children at their husband’s whim. Peru’s mother was married at 14 and his father was determined that all their children were to be named after all the countries in Latin America, from Colombia to Suriname.

This story made me uncomfortable because of it’s subject matter and the length to which Peru described his parents’ private life.

9. The Two Dolphins

Most of this story made no sense to me, not just because of the story, but also the language. It was the most difficult one to read, with a lot of new words. Easily my least favourite of the lot.


10. The Man Who Sent Two Dead Fish

 

 

11. The Deposit 


12. Andouil and Andouillette Begin Their Holiday

 

13. A Day Out for Mehmet Erbil

 

14. A Night Off for Prudente de Moraes

 

Final Verdict

I started it during my one-day trip to Pune and enjoyed it a fair bit. Can’t say I hate it, can’t say I love it — but it was a pleasant enough companion for the journey and a few days of liesure after returning home.

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Stay tuned for more book reviews. 

Until next time, happy reading!

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Shabana Mukhtar

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