Cover Image: A Station on the Path to Somewhere Better

A Station on the Path to Somewhere Better

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A Station on the Path to Somewhere Better by Benjamin Wood is about estranged characters setting out on a road trip together and how they evolve.

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Really impactful novel, deserves all the praise heaped on it. A story that stays with you with powerfully drawn characters.

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4.5 Stars.

I devoured this in one long afternoon. I simply couldn't put it down. This book is like a punch to the gut. It wrecked me. It stayed with me. It's utterly visceral and unnerving.

I loved every second of it.

This is one of those books that should be experienced blind. A sense of doom and tragedy seeps through the pages from the very beginning.

The book is told from the point of view of twelve year old Daniel, who is on a road trip with his father, travelling north to visit a film set his father works at. Thanks to this series Daniel has formed a bond with his estranged father, and he's obsessed with it. That's why his mother reluctantly agreed to this road trip. Slowly, the author reveals the relationship between the characters and unveils the father's erratic, unreliable and unpredictable personality.

Benjamin Wood's prose is beautiful; the style is detailed, poetic. He excels at writing with the voice of a twelve year old boy, and the book is tense and chilling throughout, with just the right amount of foreshadowing.

A Station on the Path to Somewhere Better is dark, violent and it depicts trauma accurately. Recommended to anyone who thinks the premise sounds interesting.

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This is the memoir of one Daniel Jarrett as he tells a story from his childhood. How he went on a road trip with his father, Francis, a journey that had a really rather shocking end and one that has haunted him into his present.
Francis is estranged from Daniel's mum, Kath, and works away a lot as a set designer/builder, currently working on popular children's show, The Artifex. Daniel is a big fan of the series, bordering I guess on obsession, and jumps at the chance when Francis offers to take him on a bit of a road trip to visit the set and meet the cast. Kath is very reluctant to let them him go as, shall we say, Francis has a bit of a dodgy track record reliability wise but eventually gives in. And so begins a journey that will haunt Daniel for the rest of his life. Full of drama and emotion, and a lot of bad behaviour, Daniel soon begins to realise that the end of the journey will not be what was promised but he is powerless to stop the wheels once they have been set in motion. Things eventually escalate and tragedy strikes and we return to the present to see the aftermath.
Also, throughout the book we "listen" along with Daniel to an audiobook of the book that the Artifex series is based on. It's a strange tale but really fitted in with the rest of the narrative rather than being distracting. It's important too as it served to ground Daniel, keep him going if you like, something comfortable to rely on when things were going astray. You could say that it served as his comfort blanket.
When things move to the present day, we take a completely different mood along with it. It is like Daniel is trying too hard to make sense of something that he has lost in his memories. How what happened back in his childhood has taken over his life from that point, and it was something that was indeed big enough and important enough to do just that, but the way he hasn't dealt with things properly did sadden me and I really felt for him and mourned for the adult he could have been had things been different both during the trip and soon afterwards.
It's a story abut what could happen given circumstances and how we deal with things. It's not a pretty story. It's gritty and visceral and will tug at your heartstrings. It exposes weakness and past defining the future. Yes, some of what happens did escalate nearly into the realm of farce as Francis got in deeper and deeper but the culmination of that side of things was indeed inevitable. There is a lot of soul searching and trying to make sense of something that makes no sense and highlights that there is indeed a need for acceptance if you are to move on.
It's an important story and one I am glad I read. My thanks go to the Publisher and Netgalley for the chance to read this book.

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I haven't read Wood's previous two novels, but I was pleasantly surprised by A Station on the Path to Somewhere Better as it takes the reader on an emotional road trip. In 1955, 12-year-old Daniel and his estranged father go on a road trip to the set of Daniel's favourite TV show, The Artifex, Now as an adult Daniel tries to remember what really happened back then, sharing his biased and unreliable memories with the reader. It is an interesting take on the effects of violence and trauma. All in all, Wood created a dark but captivating story.

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3.5 stars

I enjoyed the first person narrative,looking back and admitting this may not be as things we're,but this is how I remember them.
The build up in the first half of the book had me slightly on edge reading,just waiting for the bad thing to happen. When it did,the story continued on a while being tense as Dan tried to make sense of what happened.
By the final quarter though I felt it lost the momentum, and the book dragged a bit.
Liked the light relief of the book within the book.
This is the second book I've read by Mr Wood.wont be the last.

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Incertitude
Daniel Jarrett/Hardesty narrates the story as a memoir, starting in 1995 when he is due to leave on a road trip with his father, Francis (Fran) Hardesty, to visit the film set of ‘The Artifex’. Daniel is obsessed with the TV series, and it is only because of her son’s fixation with anything Artifex, that Kath allows Fran to take Daniel on this road trip to see the set and meet the actors, where Fran claims he works. Even with 12-year-old Daniel’s limited interaction with his father, he knows not to set his expectations too high.

Fran is an incurable womanising opportunist that has managed to destroy his marriage to Kath and consequently has been absent for most of Daniel’s life. Fran is a handsome, importune man that attracts women somewhat addictively. As the narrative progresses we get to know him as a totally unreliable and erratic person, prone to mood swings.
“He seemed to spend each new day of his life promoting compensation for the day before.”

It’s hard to say too much about the story without giving away spoilers but there is always a sense of doom and tragedy, <spoiler> especially at the start of the road trip when Daniel reflects that as he drove off it was the last time he ever saw his mother. </spoiler> We are treated to a simmering exposé of Fran’s life and his erratic behaviour, he has promised by hook or by crook, or by any other means, he is going to get his son to the set of The Artiflex. Sometimes this bubbling undercurrent felt like rambling but at a point, you realise you’re captivated. Not so much for the characters, which I didn’t have any empathy for, but for the inevitable shock waiting to pounce.

The narrative is subtle and gradually defines the relationship between father and son, and between the other characters really well. There is a tantalising element to the storyline which keeps us intrigued and not quite sure what course of actions Fran will take next.

The road trip culminates in a series of events that the reader will have to experience for themselves. Is this the Station on the Path to Somewhere Better?

Quite surprisingly those events do not bring the story to a conclusion and the remaining 20% of the book takes us on an exploration of memory, frustration and irresolution. How and why do we remember things the way we do? Why do we all remember events slightly differently?

Daniel as an adult obsessively tries to reconstruct events from his memory, witness statements, and video evidence. He struggles with the omissions, the perceptions and the tenuous connections of events. Why are there fissures in the substance of what people say? Are omissions deliberate, self-preserving, accidental, or a lapse of awareness? He torments himself with this, and on which parent is responsible for which personality trait.

A thoughtful story with frightful scares. Well worth a read!

Many thanks to Simon and Schuster UK Publishing and NetGalley for an ARC version of the book in return for an honest review.

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A Station on The Path To Somewhere Better blew me away, it is such a well written book.

It is a novel of two parts: the first, a thriller, of the lead up and description of the traumatic event, the second, a more psychological take on the after effects of witnessing something so awful, and Daniel’s attempts to craft a life from the fragments left behind. A shift in narrative and pace like this could throw a lesser author off, but Wood handles it very well.

The story builds and escalates as you read. We learn that, from the beginning, Daniel’s mother is not keen on the idea of her estranged husband taking Daniel on this roadtrip. But we assume that this is for no other reason than because he is a flakey father, he has let his son down numerous times before, and that he can’t be trusted not to take Daniel somewhere unsuitable. And the first part of the novel is just that; we start to see the unravelling of Fran’s lies – he takes Daniel to a seedy pub, he feeds him junk food. Because we are seeing the story through Daniel’s memories (or indeed, his interpretation of his child-self’s memories as an adult who has already had to recount this story numerous times, to police, to relatives, to therapists…more on this later), dark hints are laid throughout the narrative that the worst is still yet to come. We know, almost from the offset, that something terrible is to happen, and that Daniel himself will survive it, but the other ‘twists’ are revealed in advance too. It adds a terrible sense of foreboding to the narrative, everything becomes heightened and claustrophobic. It is very powerfully done.

The narrative style is worth a comment. It is a complex mix of the childhood naivety of the young Daniel, combined with hints to the emotional damage of the older Daniel, the sense that he’s had to recount the story many times before, and a fear that he’s forgetting, or misremembering. There are times when his guilt comes through, when he tries to justify his behaviour or the fact that he didn’t realise what was going to happen. This is very much the story of someone still in the grasp of PTSD – which becomes evident as we hear of Daniel’s life post the road trip. It is very cleverly, and sensitively handled.

That Daniel is a fan of the programme his father works on is no coincidence. He listens to the audiobook of it at first to pass the time in the car, but it soon becomes apparent that this isn’t the only work of fiction that he is listening to. Once the lies and inconsistencies from his father first start to reveal themselves, they steamroll. There is something very poignant in the description where Daniel, desperate to distract himself from what’s going on, makes calculations as to how long the battery on his walkman will last. It is a moment of stark contrast; reminding us how young and childlike Daniel is, and yet how terrifying and adult the situation he finds himself in is.

The prose is beautifully written, and quite often as I was reading I found myself outrightly admiring the writing style. The way Wood handles language is rich and brilliant, and also chilling in parts. On the one hand, there is the description of the physical geography of the road trip, which carries a preciseness with it that fits Daniel’s attempts to recreate the story as accurately as possible. On the other, Wood manages to capture the uneasiness of a bad gut feeling which creeps across Daniel and the novel, until you are certain that the only outcome can be tragedy.

The ending, for some, could be seen as slow paced, but personally I enjoyed the shift in tone. We see the enduring effects those fateful days have had on him, and how he lives under the shadow of his father – a man who he is terrified of turning in to. This is not quite a story of healing – that would be too simplistic – but there is something almost like hope at the end. It is a realistic hope, it is not the fairytale kind, there is still work to do. Work has already gone on, of course, there is mention of his coping mechanisms, therapists, the things he has done to counteract the wrongs of his father, but as in life, there is no magic solution, these are all just stations on his path to somewhere better.

Overall, this is a very strong, dark, thriller. It doesn’t shy away from trauma and the aftershocks in a way that stays with you long after you’ve read the last page. I couldn’t tear myself away, and I would thoroughly recommend to anyone.

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A Station on the Path to Somewhere Better is an unnerving and raw novel about the aftereffects of violence and trauma. One morning in 1995, Daniel and his estranged father Francis set off on a road trip that is meant to help fix their relationship. Daniel’s mother doesn’t think it will, thinking that Francis will slide into his usual unpredictable ways. The further Daniel and his father drive, the more this turns out to be a trip unlike any other, and soon his father’s desperation and violence will be fully unleashed, and Daniel will bear the scars of these few days for the rest of his life.

It is hard to know what to expect from this novel when you start, but it quickly sets up the looking back on trauma and a tense situation that the narrator has obsessed over ever since. The story is not simple: Daniel tells it as remembered, but also with lies and bias and an intertwined audiobook that was engrained into the events. This makes the style intense and often visceral, but also musing on the impact of memory and how things are viewed by different people. The novel feels distinctive and unusual, menacing and focused on the description of the everyday English landscapes forever tied to violence for Daniel.

Wood’s novel is worth reading even if the sound of it doesn’t immediately grab your attention: it is more than its summary, an unnerving read that uses reliability to depict childhood trauma and a lingering menace to build suspense for what must inevitably come.

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This is a compelling and claustrophobic story about a young boy witnessing his father’s slide into psychosis, paranoia and violence on a road trip across northern England. Daniel Hardesty is the only son of estranged and arguing parents and, at the start of the novel, is taken, allegedly, to visit the TV studios where Francis Hardesty, his father, works. His mother is anxious about the trip and, ultimately, with good reason as things go from bad to worse for the father and his mental condition deteriorates. The ending is violent and the impact on Daniel is permanent.

Daniel is the book’s narrator. This works well in terms of the reporting of his parents’ rocky relationship and his enthusiasm for the visit to the TV studios. He has become a fan of the TV programme which his father works on and that story links occasionally into the narrative. As the road trip falls apart, Francis meets a woman in a bar and his behaviour underlines how frail his personality is. At one level, he wants to do the best for his son but events, and the darker side of his personality, conspire against him. He wants to sort out what he sees as an injustice perpetrated on him but he is endlessly frustrated and finally snaps. Two people from his past, Chloe and QC are drawn into his narratives and, finally, join the tragic journey. The way that the son perceives and describes these characters and this descent into madness, as well as revealing the complexity of the character and the increasing tension, is highly effective at the start but possibly loses its way in the violent climax. That is the trade-off for the immediacy of the boy’s perceptions elsewhere.

It is interesting how the boy perceives his mother as saintly, even glossing over some of the detail in her teenage diaries, and that seems to be his continuing view when he looks back on the events that consumed his family. I liked this because the reader is quite likely to think that she could have done things differently and been more helpful in her marriage in terms of sorting it out, or simply leaving, but that might be just me. Anyway, there’s an interesting question there.

I’m not sure about the TV series, a science fiction series called The Artifex featuring an alien, probably female, called Cryck who is attempting to find bits of equipment which will enable her to return to the planet Aoxi. In the programme, she befriends a young boy, evidently similar in age to Daniel. That is a connection: she is also calm and competent, unlike either parent, and she wants to escape. She is played in the programme by an actress called Maxine Laidlaw who Daniel obviously has a slight crush on. After the tragic ending to the novel, this programme remains an important influence on his life.

This last section of the novel is more problematic. Daniel grows up reflects and looks back, escapes to America, marries, doesn’t really escape what happened, tries to find out more and so on, but doesn’t come to any kind of significant closure which makes the ending of the book uneasy. Maybe his biggest worry is that he will become just like his dad!

I liked this book. It is a horrifying road trip across a small, enclosed and suffocating map, from Buckinghamshire to the Pennines, then cascading to an inevitable and violent ending near Leeds. There’s something very British about it in the geography, and in the way that no one sorts out the problems on the way there!

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