A Long Way Down is
a great read that will have readers praying all turns out okay. Martin Sharp,
one of four main characters, is one that isn’t given as much love from a reader
as the others. He’s screwed up his life and while the others deserve another
chance, he doesn’t. Here are 5 reasons why.
1. He’s self-centered
Like a five-year old child all Martin thinks about is
himself. The reader feels sympathy for Martin’s ex-wife and children who he
cheated on with a 15 year old girl. However, Martin is upset that Cindy never
lets him see the girls, hates that Penny actually loves him enough to be in a
relationship with him and whines about having new companions that annoy him.
Many of us given these blessing would take them and run but Martin still stays
in what he wants and what he lost, only thinking of himself.
2. He has no self-respect.
Now the reader realizes a character that was about to commit
suicide shouldn’t be too high on self-confidence but the rest of the characters
always had something that they valued. But Martin screwed up his life and hated
himself, even though he was self-centered he recognized that he wasn’t all that
great. He describes how he doesn’t think he deserves Penny by stating, “I
couldn’t believe that she wanted to be with me for any other reason than
nostalgia and pity,” (93). Martin didn’t value himself and if he was given a
second chance he would just throw it away in order to wallow in self-pity.
3. He doesn’t want to change anything.
After meeting JJ, Maureen and Jesse Martin is basically
given a second chance. The reader watches him as he thinks about what he would
do differently. Martin realizes that he wouldn’t do anything differently
because he’s sorry that he got caught but not all that sorry for what he did.
Martin is a static character, from start to end he doesn't change.
4. He’s antisocial.
During the book the group decides to treat Maureen to a
vacation because it's all that she wishes for. While on the island, Martin
splits off from the group, run away from Jess and doesn't socialize, instead
staying in his own world. He is so determined not to spend his vacation with
the group that he hides in a pub bathroom for a couple hours just to avoid conversing
with Jess. Not only is this unbelievably rude, isn't the majority of life spent
in other's company? He's just begging to not be given another chance.
5. He's ungrateful.
Towards the end of the book he gets the opportunity to tutor
an 8 year old kid name Pacino. But he doesn't take it in with all the gratefulness
you would expect from a man who is able to prove himself moral again. He
relates the process to a plane flight saying, "I was realistic enough to
see that he wasn't going to get me all the way there, but volunteering to sit
down with a stupid and unattractive child for an hour represented several thousand
air miles, surely?" (320). He just can't take what he's given and deal
with it, he's got to complain the whole time he's making lemonade out of his
lemons.
Nick Hornby’s A Long
Way Down is interesting, funny and thought –provoking. Most of his
characters the reader will root for but they will have to keep in mind that
Martin Sharp is not one of them. If one thing is for sure, he doesn’t deserve
another chance.

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