Saturday, 7 April 2018

90's Redux - Mr Maybe by Jane Green




Bridesmaids, 2011
I blame 90's chick lit for many things, including but not limited to:
Smoking Marlboro Lights
  • White wine drinking
  • Pasta making
  • Using the word ‘team’ to describe putting together what you’re wearing
  • Writing GOD AWFUL fiction in which a feisty heroine with man troubles has a choice between two men, one who is so obviously right for her, and one who is so obviously wrong for her
  • Thinking that women that work in London only work in PR, journalism or publishing
  • ‘Teaming’ tiny camisole vests with boot-cut jeans and a ‘long, thin cardigan’
  • Being annoyed that I can’t afford Jo Malone scented candles, MAC lipstick, and designer flared trousers.

But you know what I blame you for the most, 90s chick-lit? I blame you for my fucking stupid ideas about men and relationships. Never mind Disney giving me unrealistic expectations of men, I blame all those hundreds of cheap paperbacks I read for setting me up for a life time of dating and love disappointment. The hard-work relationships I had – they were just hard work. Dating a moody, emotionally closed-off man isn’t exciting or sexy. It’s exhausting, and it depletes you. I get why the men in these books are all really sexy and gorgeous looking, because it’s an aspirational, reader insert thing – a plain ole me can get a sexy man who’s perfect type thing. Except we all know that’s not really how it works. But no one wants to read about Miss Average meeting Mr Average, do they? Anyway, on with the book.

I didn’t read Mr Maybe the first time round, but within the first few pages, I felt a little rush of nostalgia and recognition. Aaah, all the things were there. The single-girl basement flats, the Marlboro Lights, white wine and M & S party snacks, and the ridiculously hot, perfect man.
Twenty-seven year old marriage-obsessed Libby Mason works in PR (of course she does, because no-one in these books can work in a call-centre, a secondary school teacher or a nurse, because, reasons I’ll label as: ‘needs research, can’t be bothered’).

Libby meets Nick, a bedsit dwelling, starving writer who lives ‘on the dole’ and spends his nights in the pub with his ‘horrible’, [Libby’s words, not mine] crusty dole scrounging friends. 
Libby and Nick spend a passionate few months together, with Libby kidding herself that she’s only into Nick because he’s handsome and is amazing in bed. She’s worried that Nick’s got no money or ambition - and what Libby really wants is a rich husband that can buy her a big house and sports cars. When Nick dumps Libby, because he’s commitment phobic and worried that Libby’s getting too attached, Libby falls apart. Then she meets rich, posh Ed, who despite his moustache and rah-rah-rah demeanour could be ‘The One’.

Libby doesn’t fancy Ed one tiny bit, in fact his kisses make her feel sick. Despite being thirty-eight, Ed is sexually inexperienced and can’t fuck Libby good like Nick used to. Green makes Ed as hideously unlikeable as she can – he’s pompous, patronising, boring, terrible in bed. Yet he’s still not as awful as Libby, who is shallow, snobby, obsessed with looks and money, immature, a scrounger, as moody as a thirteen year old girl, and lazy. Basically, Libby is a dick.

At one point in the book, Libby describes herself as ‘the most self-aware person I know’ which made me laugh out loud because I couldn’t tell if this was supposed to be a joke or not. A few chapters previously she had described how after her first sexual encounter with Ed, she had told him, in painful detail, what he was doing wrong and how annoyed she was about it. I’m not joking, her describing her bad mood about Ed’s bedroom style goes on for about six pages. Crushing the self-awareness, Libs.

Libby is totally obsessed with being single, and constantly goes on about how she’s not complete or whole because she’s on her own. She talks as though being single is the worst thing that could happen to anyone, ever. This isn’t even a character arc, either – at no point does Libby get comfortable with her own company except when being alone gets her out of spending time with Ed. While the same accusation could be levelled at Bridget Jones, I felt that at least Bridget (if only in the first two books) actually liked her life and her own company. Every second that Libby spends on her own is miserable. Why would a man want to date someone like Libby? She is literally waiting at home by the phone for a man to come to her. She has no hobbies (no shopping doesn’t count) She’s a bitch to her mum, and she’s a whiny little brat. I don’t know many men that would find this appealing.

She also says that it’s totally fine all Ed’s forty-something friends are ‘middle-aged and old enough to be her parents’ because she’s ‘mature enough to handle it,’ 

Libby makes fun of Ed’s taste in music, the way he talks, the way he looks, his body, and his personality. She’s turned off when he’s affectionate towards her and turned on when he buys her designer handbags. The whole time she’s with Ed, she’s thinking about waster Nick.

I don’t understand why Nick can’t have a job AND write his book, because it’s because what the rest of us have to do. Why couldn’t Green have just given Nick a simple job instead of him claiming benefits? It would have made him more likeable for a start. It also perpetuates two myths 1) that claiming benefits is easy and 2) that it’s OK to do it as long as you’re doing something worthwhile with your time, like writing a novel that (spoiler alert) will eventually be published. I don’t think Jane Green has ever claimed a benefit in her life, and doesn’t know anyone who has either.

So yeah, second on the Unlikeable Douche List (I’d actually place Ed the last on the list, because at least he doesn’t pretend to be anything else other than a posh-boy pushover) is Nick.
 Nick may be fantastically handsome and very good at oral, but he’s also an insufferable dick, like Libby. From his faux-leftie politics to hanging around in pubs ‘that aren’t even country-style pubs’ (I don’t even know what that means) to his wishy-washy approach to relationships, everything he says and does comes across as a big fat fake.

Nick has a mysteriously amazing body, a washboard stomach, ‘cause everyone knows those happen when you sit around in bedsits and pubs drinking beer,  saying things like ‘I’m allergic to exercise’ (this book was written in the days when caring about your body was for losers). Nick also says to Libby that she doesn’t need make-up, because she’s so naturally pretty, unlike ‘some women who are total dogs without it,’

You know what gets my lady-boner really hard? A man who criticizes and degrades women. Oh yeah baby, just like that. Give me some more of that sexy, hot, casual misogyny.

 I also didn’t know if Nick was supposed to be one of those rich kids that rejects their parents’ wealth (except when they need it to pay the rent) or if he’s genuinely… ‘poor’. Nick lets slip that he went to public school - something that impresses super shallow Libby - but it’s not clear how this was paid for. So it seems like it’s OK to date a poor person as long as they are not really poor, just pretending to be. Nick and Libby deserve each other if you ask me, and while two arseholes are together it means they are not bothering anybody else with their arseholery.

Then there’s Libby’s best friend Jules (who is in no way inspired by Bridget Jones’ best bud, Jude.) Jules is an interior designer, because of course she is, and married to barrister Jamie. I am not sure how old Jules and Jaime are supposed to be – I’m guessing the same age as Libby. If so, then when did Jamie start training to be a barrister? When he was ten? Or has he just qualified when this book starts? Because they live in a massive posh flat and seem to have no money worries, so I it seems like Jamie may have been a barrister for a while. Libby thinks that Jamie is cool because he drinks and smokes and once confessed he wanted to be in a rock band, which further reinforces my belief that Libby is actually 13, not 27.

I thought it was kind of funny that Libby and her friends keep describing Ed as ‘way too straight’ when Libby herself won’t even go into a pub that doesn’t serve cocktails or champagne. Thus, I am not entirely sure that Green knows what ‘straight’ in that sense of the word means. It’s more the kind of word that Nick’s crusty friends would use to describe Libby.
There’s a lot of pointless, long-winded, badly written dialogue in this book, where the characters say things that no-one in real life would ever say, like your younger brother asking you where your sex life is at.

 ‘High’lights

I was given chocolates by a very keen man who arrived to pick me up and handed me a box of Milk Tray. I had to give him ten out of ten for effort, but Milk Tray? They should have been Belgian chocolates at the very least.
***
‘Jesus, Libby!’ she says. He’s going to fall head over heels in love with you! I bet he’s never met anyone like you before!’
I bet he hasn’t either
***
The phone rings just as I’ve finished applying a final coat of clear nail polish. Couldn’t have gone for my beloved blues or greens – far too trendy for Ed.
***
[in a posh restaurant with Ed] …stares at them in confusion and it’s quite amazing that he really doesn’t have a clue who these people are. I mean, for God’s sake some of the people that have walked in here tonight are the biggest stars of stage and screen and Ed’s never seen any of them before in his life!
***
I’ve had enough. I’m twenty-seven years old and I deserve to be with someone. I deserve to live in a beautiful house, not a grotty little flat in Ladbroke Grove. I deserve to be with someone who brings me flowers and buys me presents. I deserve to be in a couple, someone’s other half.
****
[during a phone call between Libby and Nick after they’ve split up, we start with Nick talking]
‘Yes. I’ve concluded that I’m completely screwed up.’
‘So tell me something else I didn’t know.’
‘Thanks!’ Indignant tone.
‘Pleasure!’ Light and breezy tone.
‘So are we friends now?’ A cautious tone.
***
[After Ed buys Libby a £1500 designer dress]
Fuck it. I don’t mind spending the rest of my Saturday with him, evening included. I mean, Jesus Christ, for £1, 500 it’s the very least I can do.
‘Fucking hell!’ says Jules. ‘Donna Karan? Fucking hell!’
‘I know, I know. Unbelievable.’
‘So did you kiss him to thank him?’
***
I’d die if my mother came into the office. Seriously. I’d want the ground beneath me to open and swallow me up. She’d be an embarrassment. The suburban housewife from hell who wouldn’t know what to say to my colleagues or how to say it.’
****
Libby says to Ed:
‘Unlike you I choose my friends because of who they are , and not because of how much money they have or which bloody public school they went to,’ (no Libby, that’s how you choose your boyfriends!)

This is all your fault, Bridget

If someone had told me that a teenage girl had written this book, I wouldn’t be surprised. There’s! A! Lot! Of ! These!!!! Still, I found myself wanting to carry on reading, but in the same way you can’t help rubbernecking at car crashes. There’s too many confusing run-on sentences which require two or three readings before you can make sense of them,  and plenty of errors that should have been caught during editing.

 Here, Libby is describing her flat:

‘There’s an L shaped kitchen off the living room, a galley kitchen, open plan and opposite the large window there are french (sic) doors leading into a bedroom’
I had to read this a few times and I am still not sure if Libby has an L shaped kitchen, and open plan one, a galley one, or if she has 3 kitchens in her tiny basement flat that’s so small it has one of those Murphy beds.
I read Mr Maybe over the course of a sick day, looking for something easily enjoyable to pass a day where it was hard to sleep because I couldn’t breathe through my nose. And I did enjoy Mr Maybe, I enjoyed getting enraged about it because it took my mind of feeling shitty, and I love a chance to deface a book with comments scrawled over the pages in angry biro.

Scores on the doors: 1/5 for cold distracting properties.

Dishonourable mentions:
Primrose Hill
Constant Liam and Patsy references (they divorced in 2000, the year after this book was published)
Libby and Jules’ weird eating disorder enabling relationship
Sex scenes written a little bit in the style of a medical text book
The 90's Dream Team - Patsy Kensit and Liam Gallagher 1997 Vanity Fair cover