Title: Number 10
Author: Sue Townsend
Date: 2002
Publisher: Soho (US)
ISBN: 1-56947-349-8
Length: 277 pages
Quote: "All went well until Mary Murphy asked him
if he knew the price of a pint of milk."
British Humour stereotypically tends to escape the
ignorant U.S. reader. At least this is true of some authors whose idea of
"humour" consists of inside jokes. I know of no U.S. reader who's
found it hard to laugh at Lewis Carroll, P.G. Wodehouse, or Douglas Adams. I
can't think of any who'd find it hard to laugh at Sue Townsend either,
although, just in case there are any "conservatives" who
really can't enjoy a joke from the Left, they should know that Number 10 is
written from a left-wing position. The Labour Party is supposed to be left of
the Conservative Party and Edward Clare's problem, so far as the other
characters in this book are concerned, is that he's not.
Edward Clare, whose rise to the position of Prime
Minister is not adequately explained, is a shy, sensitive, uptight, goodhearted
English gentleman who's always done very well in school and behaved very nicely
toward everyone. He can be accused of "having no politics," which is
almost true. He doesn't particularly enjoy being Prime Minister and, when it
becomes obvious that he doesn't know the price of a pint of milk, he's
delighted by the excuse to drive through Scotland and England with the
policeman assigned to guard his front gate, Constable Jack Sprat.
Though heterosexual, Edward Clare is the sort of small,
thin man who can wear his wife's clothes, and he enjoys trying to pass as
Jack's sister Edwina." And Jack...doesn't mind as much as he expected he
would. Jack is also shy, sensitive, uptight, and goodhearted, though not
(strictly speaking) a gentleman--he's the only law-abiding citizen in his family--and pretending to be "Edwina's"
brother is as close as he's ever come to having a close personal friendship. All the characters in this book, including Jack, are
comic, but if you like a policeman to be a hero, Jack won't disappoint you.
Jack
and Edward hire a driver called Ali who quickly becomes almost as close to
them as they become to one another. Apart from having too many children Ali is
every bit as goodhearted as the other two, only perhaps a bit better adjusted
emotionally.
If you like a comedy to contain a lot of onstage
violence or at least property damage, Number 10 might disappoint you.
The closest Edward, Jack, and their driver Ali come to violence, on their
male-bonding adventure, is when they "duff up" a polluter. They've
just left the home of someone who's been actively sickened by the poison he's
spraying into the air, and all they do is "duff him up," leaving him
able to get up, walk into town, and gripe about having been knocked off his
tractor. How very... British of them. Those who spray poison into the
air really deserve more of a Lethal Weapon sort of treatment.
If you find the use of formerly unprintable words
funny, you'll enjoy Number 10. Ignorant characters spew obscenities and
profanities because they don't know the right words for what they mean;
educated characters throw the same words around for laughs. Sentences
baby-boomers used to be punished for saying appear on almost every page. Nobody
says "shut up" if they can say "shut the **** up." We all
know some people who "really talk like that." I wonder whether
anybody actually knows quite so many of them, but I find myself putting
up with the nasty words for the sake of the jokes.
The scenes that ring thinnest, for me, are the ones
where Edward, Jack, and Ali meet working-class people who claim to need more handouts
from the government. An illegal immigrant from Albania openly tells Edward at
dinner, "It is traditional for the men of my village to travel to Britain
hidden inside a turnip truck." Trains and planes don't run on time.
Patients in a hospital have to take care of one another because the overworked
staff aren't getting to them on time. A middle-aged policeman tells our heroes,
"I'm going to have a bad back in two years' time, and because I'll have
hurt my back on the job I'll get compo and the full pension." A teenaged
single mother living in a housing project, where "some of the younger
inhabitants who'd tried prison said they preferred it... there was more to do
in prison," beats her toddler not because she's an unfit mother but
because she doesn't have free day care. Greedy country innkeepers try to tell
boarders that using boarders to do all the skilled work gives the inn
"character," while unskilled work is done by people who might have
travelled to Britain hidden inside a turnip truck: "You'll have to get on
the phone and order more foreigners," grumbles the husband, and the wife
whines, "All I said to the foreigners was that it wouldn't hurt to see a
smile now and then...that would have earned them tips." A restaurant that
advertises "fresh-picked salad...oven-baked bread, traditional farmhouse
scones...and a selection of fruit from the hedgerow" orders everything in
packages from a frozen food company. The private nursing home where Edward's
uncle lives is about to be converted to a plastic surgery clinic, and Edward's
uncle confides that he's planning to starve himself before the patients are
thrown out. And it's all because the government isn't collecting more
taxes from the rich to hand more things to these people and supervise every
move they make.
Townsend doesn't actually say that the government is to blame
for having allowed the young single mother to go out on dates, but she comes
close. We have people like that in the U.S. of course, but they're not
considered normal, and the guilt trips Townsend inflicts on Edward after
each interaction with members of his electorate make me wonder...does anyone
actually believe that providing subsidized day care is the way to stop people
hitting babies?
However, although I suspect Townsend may have given some
credence to her characters' neverending whine that poor people (other than Jack
and Ali) just can't be expected to become responsible adults, I don't find her
elitism interferes with the story. These characters are individuals. Their
whines are only slightly exaggerated from the whines of real people in the real
world. That two characters whose own experience disproves every whine the
parasites utter seem to respect the whining parasites, and take their
complaints seriously, strains credibility--because in real life there are layabout
parents of one who'll try to tell hardworking parents of five that they (the
parents of one) are too stressed to control their angry impulses toward their
own babies. There are people who'll try to tell someone who types with two
fingers, because he has only the two fingers, that they can't type
because one of their ten fingers was injured. There are people who'll try to
tell someone living on $200 a month how hard it is for them to live on $2000 a
month. They will say these things, and because the people hearing them
are too astounded to laugh, it's possible that these people think their
whines are being respected and taken seriously. They are so wrong.
Still, Jack and Ali are nicer than the average guy and it's possible, too, that
they're meant to be some sort of Socialist saints.
Mention should be made of the subplot of Edward's wife,
Adele, who is very clever but a known schizophrenic, and who decides to start
advocating for the rights of severed body parts to be given proper funerals. If
this is meant to be an exaggeration based on the behavior of real pro-life
activists, then the end of Adele's story...oh, why bother?
Edward dearly loves Adele, but schizophrenics tend to get worse with age.
Adele's main function in the plot is to provide another reason why Edward
really wants not to go back to Number 10 Downing Street. There are
proportionately smaller subplots for each of Edward's three children, too: the
boy who wants to be a real Socialist, the girl who's leaning Conservative, and
the baby.
Critics hailed this satire as proof that the United Kingdom enjoyed free speech. I would have used that to describe The Queen and I and Queen Camilla; at least in Number 10 the characters are fictional. It's quite an edgy satire, anyway, and laugh-out-loud funny. Maybe it's even funnier if you're a fiscal conservative, identify with Jack or Ali, and think the characters whining for government help are a real scream.
To buy Number 10 or most of the author's other books here, send $5 per book plus $5 per package plus $1 per online payment, via U.S. postal money order to Boxholder, P.O. Box 322, or Paypal to the address you get by telling salolianigodagewi that you're interested in this book, as shown at the very bottom of the screen. Four hardcover books of this size will fit into one $5 package. Some of the Adrian Mole books are available as pocket-size paperbacks; this web site would love to complete your collection.
This web site only wishes Townsend, who wasn't old, were still able to tell us where to send $1 per book.
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