Tuesday 7 January 2020

Three Hours by Rosamund Lupton 9th Jan

Wow! I sat and read this book in two days straight because I had to know what happened to everyone. It was gripping, relevant and political.

In the space of three hours a remote school is thrown into panic and terror. A homemade lunchbox bomb is found in the woods by one of the pupils. It might have been dismissed as a prank by most kids, but Rafi Bukhari escaped Syria with his little brother Basi, and he takes it very seriously. In a matter of half an hour the first police officer on scene is shot at and the site is under siege, In the Old School Rafi’s girlfriend Hannah is with a group in the library caring for their wounded headmaster. Pottery teacher Camille is stranded in the studio with only a few rows of clay tiles and some glass between a class of seven year olds and an automatic weapon. Further back, a group are rehearsing Macbeth in the woodland theatre and the junior school is being evacuated down to the beach. Rafi settles his brother with the teacher, they both have PTSD and he vowed not to leave him, but at least Basi is safe and he needs to get to Hannah. Basi has ideas of his own though.

I really enjoyed the varied perspectives of this novel from the kids, teachers, police, and even the parents of  the shooters. Beth Alton’s train of thought is brilliant, from assurances that her Jamie could not possibly be responsible to the thought that he’s already dead to her, from the minute he picked up the gun. The investigation and drip feed of new information is very well done and it’s obvious the author has researched well. The flashbacks of the Syrian boys are equally well placed and effective. I found the allusions to the kid’s performance of Macbeth great at first - the idea of using Syria as a backdrop and the witches as balaclava clad terrorists is clever. However, I do feel it was carried too far and that it became clunky and difficult to believe. This is where I had some disappointment with the ending, which I won’t spoil, but suffice to say it felt more fantastical than realistic. In the main this was a great thriller that kept the reader hooked and didn’t let go till the very end.

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