The restraint of beasts

a novel

214 pages

English language

Published Dec. 13, 1999 by Scribner Paperback Fiction.

ISBN:
978-0-684-86511-9
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (6 reviews)

The Restraint of Beasts is a tragicomic debut novel, written by Magnus Mills. In it, an anonymous narrator "the foreman" works for a Scottish fencing company, run by Donald who is consumed by work and the desire for "efficiency". The narrator is promoted to foreman and put in charge of Tam and Richie who prefer a laissez-faire approach to work and so are at odds with both their management and their new foreman. Mills' deadpan narrative voice is at times either revealing or naive, and both these interpretations of the narrator are supported throughout the text – it is up to the reader to decide where the narrator is ironic or genuinely emoting.

7 editions

enclosure~enclosure~enclosure

3 stars

Magnus Mills presents a sharp, funny and caustic story about three fencers in Scotland – the narrator, Tam and Richie – who are embroiled in a purgatory of repetitive tasks building enclosures for "beasts". Fencing by day and drinking in the pub each evening, the characters are locked in a self-defeating cycle. While this continues, the company that they are working for gradually modernises, leaving them with less wages and more work at each iteration.

Written without any flourish like a story told in a pub, this is a book of non-events. Even when major climactic or shocking things happen, the storytelling never breaks stride as if the monotony somehow buries the life that should be lived. The writing is compelling throughout and the way the poverty trap is presented is cleverly unfolded. Enjoyable, short and darkly witty; a modern parable about work.

Review of 'The restraint of beasts' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Fun little book, with serious dark humor. This tells the story of 3 traveling fence installers, who get sent from Scotland to England to put up a high tension fence. While there, they stay in a "caravan" - a camper, get on each others nerves and hit the local pub. They have a few run ins with the locals and butt heads with the fence company owner (their boss). And that's about it.

Told by the "foreman" of this happy little group, who tries to make sense of the lugs that he has working for him. They do battle with a ridiculous boss figure and try to survive long rainy days in the field.

For a book that doesn't cover much ground, it is eminently readable and quite funny. I don't think any of them end the job with more money in their pocket than what they started with - …

Subjects

  • Fences -- Design and construction -- Fiction.
  • Contract labor -- England -- Fiction.
  • Young men -- England -- Fiction.
  • Scots -- England -- Fiction.
  • Scotland -- Fiction.
  • England -- Fiction.