Review "Supremely accomplished and moving… A masterful performance… This is a gripping, mature, important novel. It would be a travesty if it doesn’t win prizes." (William Skidelsky Observer)"A layered and subtle exploration of masculinity, fear and desire, A Natural is as good a novel as I’ve read in years. The poignancy of Ross Raisin’s characters are equalled only by the brilliance of his writing." (John Boyne)"Admirable … genius … amazing… vertiginous." (Claire Lowdon Sunday Times)"A Natural is a brilliant, deft and moving coming of age novel about the nature of masculinity and sexuality set against the backdrop of sport. Sensitively and beautifully drawn, it confirms Ross Raisin as a superb writer." (Carol Ann Duffy)"Most novels about football aren’t really about football… They tend to avoid describing the game itself, with its strange mixture of pelting energy and exquisite boredom. Instead they shunt it into the background or repackage it as a metaphor, allowing the simple whacking of a ball into the net to be used as a way of writing about far less tangible goals. Ross Raisin’s latest novel is refreshingly different. Following the fortunes of two lower-league footballers, it is a bold attempt to capture sport in the raw… pitch-perfect." (Robert Douglas-Fairhurst The Times)"A brave, subtle novel… To a non-fan, the literary football novel can seem a little daunting… Luckily, Ross Raisin’s exceptional new novel addresses and overturns these preconceptions and conventional notions of masculinity in the most unexpected and sophisticated fashion… Within the sinuous torque of its sentences, the book presents a subtle and portrait of a soul in torment. It’s a winner." (Jude Cook Guardian)"Football, like love, is a world of extreme highs and lows, and the protagonists in this sensitively crafted novel can only find joy when they accept who they really are – five stars." (Sun)"A powerful evocation of repressed emotion – The Remains of the Day as told by Match of the Day." (Sam Kitchener Telegraph)"A Natural…is not just a football novel. It’s about depression, loneliness and the truth behind masculinity." (Irish Tatler)"Excellent… Raisin excels at hidden stories… this is a richer, deeper novel that purposefully rejects the over-exposed Premier League image of the beautiful game for the grubbier hardscrabble of life at the bottom of League Two… Raisin is really good at exposing the ways men parade ideas of masculinity… a deeply absorbing novel about the coded nature of identity, whether you are a footy fan or not." (Claire Allfree Metro) Book Description A masterful performance… This is a gripping, mature, important novel. It would be a travesty if it doesn’t win prizes. -- Observer About the Author Ross Raisin was born in 1979 in West Yorkshire. His first novel, God's Own Country, was published in 2008 and was shortlisted for nine literary awards, including the Guardian First Book Award and the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize. In 2009 Ross Raisin was named the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year. In 2013 he was selected as one of Granta's Best of Young British writers. He lives in London.
B**2
Disappointing
I can’t believe that this is the same author I followed after reading God’s Own Country. How can two books be so different with this being dull, repetitive and boring. Swiped through the last 50%.
M**S
A wonderful and powerful novel from a great
I am still winded by this book, and have the characters in my head, five days after finishing it. A wonderful and powerful novel from a great writer
P**H
This Pitch is Real, Relevant and Just a Bit Raunchy!
As someone who is gay and has managed a football team, admittedly amateur, I feel a little qualified to comment about this book. As someone who is married, to a man, perhaps I am qualified more. If it's Easter no doubt my experience and history to date don't count.I liked this book. I liked it a good deal. The descriptions of the tedium and preparation really resonated with me. The highs of personal and team victories and the commensurate lows you always get in competitive sport.The author dealt with the football really well and the off field stuff be it gay or straight was on point. I have known players like Tom and even the "Easters" of this world. I have also seen the disappointments and resignation of players when selection doesn't happen.The book describes the context and background of lower league football very well. I recall sentences when the smell of the room was described, when the view of a changing room from a sitting position was nailed and how panic and fear of being outed was taken care of very efficiently and colourfully by the author.The subject matter is relevant, the writing is good and has the right pace, the principal characters you will like or loathe and the plot takes you where you need to be and end up. Loved it. I would like a sequel.
J**D
Sensitively written, understated and touching
A Natural by Ross Raisin is a quietly literary novel about a 19-year-old professional footballer who, upon being let go from a Premier League club in the north, is signed by a League Two club down south. Shy and introverted, Tom Pearman finds it hard to adjust; he's living in digs, his team are failing and he struggles to get along with the club's bullying manager as he succumbs to a succession of injuries. But Tom has a much bigger problem: he's gradually coming to realise that he might be gay, and the consequences of being found out while pursuing a career in football are unthinkable.A Natural is brilliantly well-written. Raisin's prose is sparse and clear, and perfectly captures Tom's status as a perpetual outsider - he even finds himself playing on the wing, rather than his old position as a striker in the centre. The novel also evokes the bleakness of his environment with a stark perfection: damp pitches, empty changing rooms, tawdry provincial nightclubs, cheap corporate hotels. There's a constant sense of insecurity and unease - Tom is terrified of his sexuality for its own sake, not just because he fears being outed and shunned, and like many footballers, he also lives in constant fear of career-ending injuries, loss of form or losing his place in the squad to a new, better signing.Ross Raisin's decision to include chapters from the points of view of two other characters gives the story some valuable additional perspective, and lends depth to the story. Club captain Chris Easter has returned to Town after a disastrous stint at Middlesbrough and nearing the end of his career, spending his days obsessively refreshing threads on club fan forums to see what supporters are saying about him. He's a husband and father, but when someone asks him where his son goes to nursery he realises he doesn't know.Finally, through the eyes of Easter's wife Leah we get a taste of life as someone whose partner has a career around which the entire family's life revolves. Constantly trying to avoid upsetting Easter's delicate equilibrium - brash alpha male on one hand but insecure to the point of paranoia on the other - Leah is left to look after their child, prepare his nutritionally calculated meals, give him massages and endure long afternoons of boredom in the player's lounge on match days.The constant state of unease experienced by all three characters makes A Natural an oddly tense read, even though it's not at all a plot-driven novel. Tom's furtive relationship with a club employee is played out against a backdrop of constant homophobia, both casual and overt. That's not to say that everyone involved with football in this book is a gay-bashing stereotype - individually, in fact, plenty of the characters aren't - but Raisin does paint a realistic picture of changing room banter, and aggressive, strutting machismo, and also highlights the oddness of a group of men who are frequently naked in each other's company, encouraged to form close bonds and hero-worshipped obsessively by male fans, yet remain in complete denial that this might be in the slightest bit homoerotic. Raisin also looks at the conflicting attitudes towards gay men held by some women - the sort who like the idea of a camp, outrageous gay best friend but feel jealous, rejected or threatened when they meet gay men who are 'straight-acting'.Football in this book is both Tom's enemy and his saviour, and I can't quite decide whether you need at least a moderate understanding of it to love this book. Ross Raisin paints a vivid picture of life in the lower echelons of the game, and his descriptions of Town's ground, facilities and management are full of well-chosen details that will create the right atmosphere if you know nothing about the game - but equally, I think a reader with zero football knowledge might just miss out on being able to appreciate how absolutely spot-on Raisin's observations are. I certainly think you need to understand the degree to which football lags behind society, and even most other sports, when it comes to the acceptance of gay men (of the thousands of professional footballers in the British men's game, not one has come out as gay) in order to fully grasp exactly what Tom is trying to come to terms with.A Natural is sensitively-written, understated and touching, and often desperately sad. I can't say that the ending left me feeling that any of the relationships at the book's core were satisfyingly resolved, but it's all the more realistic for that, and ultimately there is a note of hope at the end that leaves you wondering if one day, after a lot of soul-searching and redemption, things must just turn out all right for Tom after all.
A**R
Immature boorish oafs!
I am a gay man who has never had the slightest interest in football or indeed in any sport. I did however often dream of being in a relationship with a footballer, based on their fitness, athleticism, and male beauty. Then I read A Natural, with its portrayal of players as immature boorish oafs, and my fantasy has been killed for ever.And just as well, for, as in God's Own Country, Ross Raisin has again demonstrates here his consummate skill in creating truly repulsive male characters. His footballers and their managers form yobbish laddish mobs and utilise a cruel travesty of humour, which they call banter, to intimidate into conformity any who might show any tendency to stray outside of it. Among this unsavoury lot, the chief character Tom stands out like a good deed in a very bad world.The book is brilliantly written and most readable, but on finishing it I deeply wished I hadn't had to meet some of the characters that fill its pages.
B**N
A rare gem
I picked this book up after listening to the Guardian podcast interview with Ross Raisin, and also because it is remarkably rare to find a football fiction book aimed at adults. The language used is coarse, but the author paints a very vivid picture of the environment that the main character is in, and focuses a lot on his feelings during this. I suppose a minor criticism is that a lot of modern day football teams and cup names are used, which will date the book in future years, but this is more a personal gripe for me rather than a general problem with the writing.I also have to praise the author for approaching a taboo subject in the sport with such care. It would be easy to write any novel about modern-day football, but to deal with homosexuality in English football is a brave step, and has turned into a cracking read.
J**S
Beautifully written and realistic
Don't read this book if you want a fairy tale romance or a heartbreaking tragedy. What makes the book special, apart from the beautiful writing, is its realism. I'm sure it's an accurate portrayal of the macho and homophobic world of professional football and it explains why a player would have to be mad or very brave to come out.
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