Indelible Ink – Fiona McGregor (2011)

To kick off this year of Australian women writers, we open with Fiona McGregor’s much-talked-about Indelible Ink. This novel serves up a living, breathing slice of Sydney as it is right now. If you don’t know Sydney, you will know it by the end of this novel! And if you do know Sydney, you’ll recognise how photo-realistic McGregor’s depictions are. She gets it so right – the humidity of a Sydney summer, that faint rotting tropical smell always in the air, the dramatic difference between leafy, harbour shore homes, rundown (but increasingly gentrified) Aboriginal Redfern and seedy Kings Cross, the cool incense-y insides of St Mary’s Cathedral and the bats of Hyde Park next door… McGregor really knows her place and it shows.

She makes clear what she is mapping here:

The cellular structure of society, like a hive, cheek by jowl the wealthy lawyer, the tattoo artist, the housing commission Aborigine.

This is the reality of Sydney: wealthy and poor, exclusive and public, outsider and mainstream, all crowded upon each other, overlapping and more than occasionally coming into conflict.

Her characters seem to grow organically out of this hot humid setting, not least of all Marie, the novel’s protagonist, a middle-aged recently-divorced ‘North Shore lady’ – except she’s not… We sense from the outset that Marie is much more interesting than that: there’s something untamed inside her, that’s timed to burst out at any moment to horrify her matronly friends. Sure enough, Marie’s new direction starts with a spur-of-the-moment decision to get a single rose tattoo…

All this occurs during Sydney’s recent drought – a drought which causes much consternation for North Shore matrons as they worry for their water-hungry gardens (the North Shore of Sydney = Toorak in Melbourne = Upper East Side in New York, etc..). McGregor’s vibrant botanical descriptions are a large part of the narrative’s delights. I only wish, not having much gardening knowledge myself, that there were some sort of application whereby I could just hover my finger over a plant name to make a picture and description pop up! (Maybe on the next generation of e-readers?)

The drought seems to also foreshadow an ongoing environmental crisis for Sydney’s usually tropically-lush slopes:

The indigenous people said that Sydney had six seasons but now it felt like neither six nor four, but one: summer.

Human beings in this setting appear less the rational creatures they’re supposed to be and more just another form of natural life, struggling in the harsh conditions. This interweaving of two forms of life is made concrete in the repeated application of tattooed images that unfold their tendrils and ‘grow’ slowly all over Marie’s body. First discreetly, then boldly, the tattoos take over but it seems less a covering than a revealing, as Marie’s true self emerges and her false friends fall away… One of the lovely subtleties of this story is the surprise element in which of her old friends stay faithful to Marie and which reject her as she radicalises herself.

As this novel unfurls towards its genuinely moving climax, it just gets better and better… what starts out as a gently gossipy newly divorced matron saga (done well, but done before) turns into a creative and fresh treatment of the sunset of a woman’s life. McGregor somehow manages to be tough-minded and tender at the same time: sentiment is balanced with a strong realism and acceptance of the body’s deterioration and decay. As this highly particular and localised drama draws to a close, Marie emerges as an Everywoman, demonstrating the shared fragility of plant and human life.

Verdict: A moving and picture-perfect account of facing middle age in contemporary Sydney.

Watch out for: Contemporary references abound! From soaring real estate prices to recent television shows (remember The Chaser’s shenanigans in Sydney?) to famous Australian television ads, prepare for many jolts of recognition!

 

Freedom – Jonathan Franzen (2010)

Reading a Jonathan Franzen novel is exhausting! This major novel is every bit as big, complicated and long as The Corrections before it.  Its premise is rather promising: the teenage son of a committed Democrat couple (Patty and Walter) decides to move in with the Republican family next door. The reasons for this are slowly revealed, but really this event fades into the background as the novel’s trajectory veers off to include rape, corruption, adultery, nepotism, war, depression and a maybe-murder – all against a background of impending environmental doom. Are you sure you want to keep reading?

Like its predecessor, Freedom is what is usually called a ‘sprawling’ family saga. Like The Corrections¸ there is some wild and slightly unlikely international intrigue and all sorts of politics (family, national and international). Like The Corrections it is an easy read in the sense that it pulls you in quickly and keeps you reading till you arrive (somewhat breathless) at the final resolution.

Now for the differences: Freedom has not even one – not one! – likeable character.  I can believe the bundle of neuroses and complaints that forms each personality, but somehow the sum is less than the parts… Take Patty, our alleged heroine (or anti-heroine?): early in the novel, as a teenager, something terrible happens to her and this initially engages our sympathy, yet Patty herself is somehow still closed off: her emotions and thoughts are described in great detail, yet she remains rather a cold fish. Why this appearance of coldness and distance when we are given so many thousands of words about her? I think in the end, although intended as a somewhat ‘scattered’ character, she is just too scattered – there’s no central core that the reader can get a hold of and say, “Oh, so that’s Patty”.

Patty’s husband Walter is a Democrats-supporting birdwatching nature-loving environmentalist who seriously loves Patty. He loves her so much, in fact, he is willing to temporarily suspend his passionate anti-population beliefs in order to have two children with her! The struggle between political loves and human loves forms much of the tensions of the rest of the narrative, as all characters assert their need to be loved in the face of overwhelming global calamities that require nun-like devotion and seem to leave no time for personal relationships.

Walter is the voice of Nature, but ironically in order to protect Nature he has to become a particularly frenetic, disconnected, un-natural human being. Machiavellian machinations and political wheeling and dealing partly appeal to him and yet underneath it all the motivation for this dubious activity is the simplicity of the natural world itself – especially the birds! He looks longingly to nature for relief from his own dehumanising lifestyle:

He watched a catbird hopping around in an azalea that was readying itself to bloom; he envied the bird for knowing nothing of what he knew; he would have swapped souls with it in a heartbeat.  And then to take wing, to know the air’s buoyancy even for an hour…

It’s easy to know what freedom is for a bird – the freedom to fly around, to not be in a cage – but how to explain the complexity of human freedom? While cleverly displacing his preachiness onto the fanatical Walter, Franzen reveals both the problem of human freedom and the urgent environmental one, along with the depressing unlikelihood of finding a solution to either in the near future.

The political philosopher Isaiah Berlin famously distinguished negative and positive ideas of freedom – ‘freedom from’ and ‘freedom to’. All the characters in Franzen’s novel desperately pursue a ‘freedom from’ their particular demons and eventually achieve it. What happens when they achieve these freedoms is when the novel gets really interesting: they were so quick at escaping their constraints that they hadn’t stopped to consider what positive things they might value. An allegory for American politics? Perhaps.

Franzon also explores how one person’s ‘freedom’ may impinge on another’s – an issue at the centre of contemporary American society in particular:

People came to this country for either money or freedom. If you don’t have money, you cling to your freedoms all the more angrily. Even if smoking kills you, even if you can’t afford to feed your kids, even if your kids are getting shot down by maniacs with assault rifles. You may be poor, but the one thing nobody can take away from you is the freedom to fuck up your life whatever way you want to…

Freedom here becomes a kind of compensatory wealth which many people value even if it kills them. Franzen seems particularly interested in understanding the more loony end of politics in the United States: the defence of guns, of prison rates, of the death penalty and the question of why so many ‘freedoms’ fought for in America are so often purely negative.

In the end, Freedom is a very sad book – sadder than The Corrections – and possibly angrier. Its conclusion doesn’t really resolve anything, but at the very least Franzen has gone on record as indicating, from a global point of view, his concern for the world’s intractable environmental problems, and, from a human point of view, his belief that love solves nothing but is somehow equally inevitable.

Verdict: Rollicking but depressing family saga with the now-expected Franzonian mixture of humour and pathos. Not always fun to read, but definitely rewarding.

Read more: Read an interview with Franzen about Freedom and how he doesn’t believe in the ‘Great American novel’ here:

 

 

 

The Winter Vault – Anne Michaels (2009)

Anne Michaels is a poet as well as a novelist and has written, unsurprisingly, a very poetic novel.  Its poetry is both its great strength and its weakness: is it a poetic novel or an epic poem?  I’m still not sure…

I enjoyed the poetry of Michaels’ storytelling – she has an ear for the perfect phrase, the delicate description, the minute, exquisite detail.  Naturally, this is slow-going, but the saving grace of this unusual novel is its characters – it’s actually by holding back, by not giving us a lot of detail of the psychology of her characters, that Michaels retains our interest. 

We are introduced to a young couple, Jean and Avery, from Canada and Britain respectively.  It’s the 1960s and Avery is destined to work on a monumental engineering project in Egypt, one that will change many lives, including their own.  Both characters are closed, mysterious, with heavy war-affected histories: the ghost of the war hangs over everyone.  One of Michaels’ achievements in this novel is to make real for the reader how global World War II was – from Poland to Canada to Egypt… Through a few well-chosen characters, artefacts and places, Michaels weaves together the global and individual grieving experience underlying the huge technological progresses that were being instigated post-war.

Michaels employs at times a style of detailed writing decried by some literary critics: basically, this style involves the delivery of an enormous amount of detail about mundane processes / industries / histories.  It requires much research and is impressive in an academic way, but is it… literature?  That’s the big question.  Michaels’ huge lists of intricate processes deliver an enormous volume of technical detail. The problem is that sometimes pages and pages of minute detail about, say, Egyptian engineering techniques, stops ‘reading’ as a story and starts to sound like a long essay. 

On the other hand, Michaels does write the most exquisite lists – and it’s not an exaggeration to say that the majority of the novel consists of lists: historical, beautiful, statistical… it’s her inventory of history, of migration and the randomness of people’s meetings and partings.  Not surprisingly, given her fondness for lists, Michaels references John Masefield’s famous poem ‘Cargoes’.  This is a poem that consists mainly of lists: lists of cargoes, from history to the present, starting with an unrivalled description of the exotic and mysterious: 

Quinquireme of Nineveh from distant Ophir,
Rowing home to haven in sunny Palestine,
With a cargo of ivory,
And apes and peacocks,
Sandalwood, cedarwood, and sweet white wine…

 And here is Michaels describing the human debris sold at a post-war Egyptian market:

Spanners, handkerchiefs, pencil crayons, steam irons, Soviet cigarettes and old newspapers, years out of date, from all over Europe.  Shellac, perfume, machine oil, tissue-thin blue airmail paper edged with mucilage…

 Her heroine, Jean, reflects upon this cargo:

The anonymous loss, the hardship or death that brought this ivory comb or this watch engraved ‘from your loving father’ to a stall in Wadi Halfa oppressed her: the memories she imagined these objects carried, the sadness of things…

‘The sadness of things’ really sums up the essence of this novel: so many people lost in the War and what’s left?  Just haphazard objects,  which become memorials to the dead. 

Perhaps Michaels’ list-making style is the clue to the meaning of the novel: that she is trying to present an account of war and its aftermath as carefully measured and calculated as any bookkeeping.  On the one side, human suffering; on the other side, great loves; on the one side, death; on the other side, survival into peace.  One of the most moving passages in the book is her recounting of Polish refugees who have both escaped the war and are still living it every day – a band of musicians who always changes their practice date at the last moment, carried over from the days when it was vital to never turn up where you were meant to be, lest the secret police find you…

There are themes of environmental and human destruction, masked as ‘progress’, of the excitement of building things versus the human cost.  Michaels is an extremely thoughtful writer who tries to encompass the human dimension and the global at the same time.  Overall, I think she achieves her ambition, although sometimes excessive detail detracts from the force of the work as a whole.

Verdict: Impressive, poetically detailed account of post-war love and loss.  For the poetry-lovers!

Read more:   Michaels’ first novel was the acclaimed Fugitive Pieces (1996).  You can read an interview with the reclusive author here

 

Geography – Sophie Cunningham (2004)

We recently looked at Sophie Cunningham’s non-fiction work, Melbourne, and this week I’m delving into her first fiction work, Geography.  This is a travel narrative on two levels: a physical journey from Australia to Los Angeles to India and back again and an emotional journey of a woman coming to grips with an obsessive love.

The narrator, Catherine, begins her story in the present, chatting in India with a newfound travelling friend, Ruby.  Just upon the point of telling her life story, Catherine begins to doubt the worth of telling such a potentially clichéd tale at all:

People are bored with stories of obsession.  With women in their late thirties who are single, the reasons they might be so…

‘I like stories,’ Ruby says.  ‘It’s one of the fun things about travelling – hearing people’s stories.’

Yes, it is, and Cunningham proceeds to intersperse the narrative of her re-discovery of India with flashbacks to her obsessive LA-based love.  As she flags, people do sometimes get bored with obsessive love stories – perhaps because these tend to involve a lot of repetition – ‘she loves him / she hates him / she loves him again’, etc… Obsessive love narratives can make you want to slap the hopeless heroine and tell her to get a grip.

Well, I did occasionally feel the urge to slap coming on, but this is just testimony to Cunningham’s skill at communicating the depth of the obsession.  As usual, the object of the obsession is hardly worth all that angst – the reader can clearly see he is arrogant, uncaring and untrustworthy.  However, we are also given entry to Catherine’s headspace and we see that, from her point of view, her love interest, Michael,  is endlessly intriguing and promises to open up new avenues of experience.  The excitement of being with him is tied up with that exciting feeling of ‘being overseas’ , wherein every little action – opening the door to a new hotel room, driving past a famous house, is experienced at a kind of heightened level of reality.  Being in love with this man, Cunningham implies, is at some level being in love with exotica and otherness and unknown-ness – all the things that are part of travelling to new places.  The connection between physical and emotional geography is made explicit through Catherine’s quoting of the metaphysical poet John Donne:

Licence my roving hands to go

Behind, before, above, between, below

Oh my America, my new found land…

Can such love survive the transfer to the more ordinary turf of her home country?  The obsession seems likely to falter under less cosmopolitan conditions…

For those inclined to dismiss Los Angeles as shallow, materialistic and crowded with fake overly-tanned airheads, Cunningham persuasively mounts a case for it being Not Such a Bad Town After All.  Catherine enjoys the scenery, the old art deco architecture, the exotic feeling of starring in your own movie.  Cunningham has a particular skill for capturing the joy of travel and she makes LA seem fresh and interesting, despite its overexposure on bad TV shows for so many years.

Parallel to the central love story, is the gentle unfolding of Catherine’s travelling friendship with Ruby.  Much younger but perhaps wiser, Ruby is a breath of fresh air compared to the stifling atmosphere of Catherine’s romantic obsession.  As they travel on more deeply into the heart of India and into its spiritual history (beautifully described by Cunningham), the possibility starts to present itself that the friendship could deepen into something more…

What starts out as a contemporary travel story turns into a quite philosophical meditation upon the nature of obsession vs love, and destiny vs choice.  Cunningham brings the reader to some thoughtful conclusions about women and personal responsibility.  What is satisfying about this novel is the willingness to go ‘deeper’, to ask thoughtful questions about the choices of the protagonists and the meaning of the emotions involved.

One of the criticisms of this book when it first came out was that it was too adolescently autobiographical – a criticism which is unfair and patronising.  Women’s writing is often criticised for being ‘too’ autobiographical, even though it is clear this style of writing is present in men’s books as well.  What is implied in this criticism is that the details of women’s lives are simply not of interest to the reading public.  Skilled writers like Cunningham demonstrate the falsity of this assumption and hopefully clear the way for more appreciation of women’s stories by readers of either gender.  (Cunningham herself has been instrumental in supporting the recognition of women’s writing – see note below.)

A note of warning: Cunningham chooses to use the c-word to refer to her anatomy, being one of the women who thinks this word can be reclaimed and stripped of its women-hating connotations.  I happen to disagree.  Parallel to similar discussions about racist language, it may be less offensive for a woman to use this word, but that fact does not thereby strip it of its problematic history.  If you are squeamish about this, you may find some parts of this book a little hard to take.

Verdict: Thoughtful travelogue / love story with a deeper reflection upon the nature of obsession vs authentic love and some evocative travel scenes.  Will make you want to hop on a plane!

Watch out for:  Cunningham has recently been involved in setting up a prize for women’s writing, the Stella Prize.   Expect to discover some excellent new writing through this award… I can’t wait to see who will be the first winner!

 

The Slap – in your house this Thursday!

Community Service Reminder! 

The TV series of Christos Tsiolkas’ Melbourne novel The Slap (reviewed here) is starting this Thursday 8.30pm (Australian Eastern time) on the ABC.  I just found out that one of the scriptwriters is the actor/author Brendan Cowell!  Yes, he who wrote for and starred in Love My Way and who recently published his first novel, How it Feels(He even appears as a minor character in the series… watch out for him!) 

And here is Tsiolkas, who was an associate producer for the series, talking about the cast:

My first time on set happened to be at the Alphington house where the slap happens, so all the cast were there, and to suddenly have the experience of suddenly seeing these fictional characters from my imagination, in flesh and blood, was truly humbling and truly awe-inspiring and it felt like the perfect cast. I can’t imagine the characters without seeing the faces of the actors and there isn’t a wrong note at all.

Sounds pretty happy with it, doesn’t he?  You can read the rest of his interview here.   And watch a preview here.  

I’m thinking this could be good…

The Time We Have Taken – Steven Carroll (2008)

This is not a book to read impatiently!  Steven Carroll’s Miles Franklin Award-winner The Time We Have Taken is a poetic, atmospheric work that forms part of his ‘Glenroy trilogy’ (although it may be read on its own).  Carroll introduced us to his characters in The Art of the Engine Driver (2001) and The Gift of Speed  (2004), set in Glenroy in Melbourne’s northwest, and this novel revisits his characters at the beginning of a new decade.

The year is 1970 and an atmosphere of boredom prevails. It seems the entire suburb is snoozing in the summer sun, the political upheavals of the times having almost completely passed it by.  One resident, however, hatches a plan that will offer some much-needed excitement to the suburb’s jaded citizens…

The reader is gently taken for a visit into various houses as, chapter by chapter, we get to know the characters, family and business ties of the area.  There is Rita, a middle-aged woman, alone but not necessarily lonely, since she has separated from her husband and her only son has left home.  Of similar age, but of a different class, is ‘Mrs Webster’ (we are not allowed, it seems, to get to know her on a first-name basis).  She, too, is left alone since her business-magnate, factory-owning husband died, but perhaps she is lonely.  A potential friendship is hinted at between these two different women, but the class divide looms strong….

Michael, Rita’s son, is at university and in love with that slightly-irritating, aloof and unknowable type of idealised girl that male writers are always populating their novels with.  She is above him, she is a saint, she is a sexual cipher who may or may not have a past with other men, etc, etc… The warm dreaminess of Michael’s lovelorn state is nicely realised, but Madeleine, his elusive love, can only ever be a mystery to him – and to the reader.

Although ostensibly set it the 1970s, Carroll’s novel dips in and out of other times as his characters fall back into their memories or fly ahead to an imagined future.  He is particularly adept at a kind of accessible stream-of-consciousness style, so that the memories and thoughts of one Glenroy resident blend seamlessly into descriptions of the street he lives on and so into the memories of one of his neighbours…  These blended and woven memories form, ultimately, a meditation upon time and its passing:

The time we have taken is no more or less than it takes for a dreamer to roll over in bed and wake from the dream.  No more or less time than it takes for a suburb to be born and grow, for its streets and footpaths to be scooped out of the paddocks of old farms and wild thistle country…

Because the ‘burbs are not at the centre of political change (despite a pre-prime-ministerial visit by Whitlam!), change is felt rather than seen.  It’s ‘in the air’ and some residents have a sense that what was their time now belongs to someone (something?) else.  The factories close down and they do not make things any more.  Decisions about manufacturing will very soon be taken offshore and out of their hands.  Is this a novel about the birth of economic rationalism?  Of globalisation?  Carroll will not be drawn: he leaves it up to his readers.

Upon my first reading, I felt the narrative never really ‘took off’; it seemed to be continuously in second gear.  I wanted a climax or a dramatic arc rather than a series of episodes in the emotional and community lives of the suburb.  Although the dreaminess of Carroll’s style is in some ways appropriate for the time and place – 70s non-bohemian suburbs –  it can, at times, make the novel feel insubstantial.  However, I think it has to be taken as a chapter in a greater work – a work that is still continuing.  Its goal, like its British counterpart Dance to the Music of Timeis to record a time that has passed away – to record it in undramatic detail, and to let other people – the readers and critics – analyse, politicise, pass judgment and draw out its morals.  This is a ‘quiet’ book that could easily be dismissed as slight, but its gentle telling of small joys and slow declines is haunting in its own way.

Verdict: Slow-paced, poetic narrative of life in 1970s suburban Melbourne.  Not for impatient readers!

Read more: Carroll has just published his ‘prequel’ to the Glenroy trilogy, The Spirit of Progress (2011).  For those new to Carroll, this might be a good place to start, so you can read the history of his Glenroy characters in chronological order and get the full cumulative effect!  And you can listen to a podcast by Carroll about his work here.

The Corrections – Jonathan Franzen (2001)

Jonathan Franzen is famous for two things: (1) writing The Corrections, and (2) refusing an offer to be part of Oprah’s Book Club.  (Possibly more famous for the latter!)  His concern at the time was not so much a high culture / low culture clash but a worry that male readers would be alienated by an ‘Oprah’ sticker on the cover, Oprah’s Book Club being seen by many men as a women’s thing.

Franzen in a way predicted his own novel with a 1996 essay in Harpers literary magazine.  In Perchance to dream: In the age of images a reason to write novels, he sets out his vision for what a modern novel should be. Central to his vision was the importance of characterisation – Franzen argued that many novels had become mere mouthpieces for the author’s set of ideas and provide nothing for readers to empathise with. He writes:

 At the heart of my despair about the novel had been a conflict between my feeling that I should Address the Culture and Bring News to the Mainstream, and my desire to write about the things closest to me, to lose myself in the characters and locales I loved…. Expecting a novel to bear the weight of our whole disturbed society – to help solve our contemporary problems – seems to me a peculiarly American delusion.

The Corrections was subsequently heralded as delivering upon these promises, reviving the old-fashioned Tolstoy-type ‘social novel’ that doesn’t solve the world’s problems but presents them in a social form readers can relate to.  Does he succeed in his ambitious aim?  Well, let’s just say his characters work – they’re sometimes so unbelievable as to be convincingly true (truth being stranger than fiction, etc). 

This is a lengthy Midwestern family saga in which all members get their time in the sun. What I liked about Franzen’s characters was the way he could genuinely surprise us with their depth – in the first third of the novel we get set-ups which present them as ‘types’ – the artistic son, the corporate son, the rebellious daughter, the repressed mother, the distant father, and we think we’ve seen all these characters before.  But Franzen, having drawn us into their stories, starts to let us enter their minds and there’s much there to make us reconsider our initial evaluations.  The most complex and intriguing character is the matriarch Enid, who presents at first as having mindlessly absorbed the mores of her childhood, continuing to espouse her general disapprovals of the younger generation in a robotic fashion.  Yet through flashbacks (and forwards) we see a more sensitive and complex picture emerge: the young, innocent wife, the disappointments she endures, her ambitions, her interest in things new to her – an interest that never dies but continues to manifest itself in surprising ways… yes, there’s more to frumpy stay-at-home Enid than meets the eye and her character’s emergence through the novel’s progress is a delight.  Enid’s daughter, Denise, too is an endearingly complex personality, and Franzen’s sensitive telling of this mother-daughter love-hate relationship proves he really can ‘write’ female characters.

The ‘corrections’ of the title are ostensibly those that Chip the Artistic Son has to do to his ever-changing screenplay in order to get it to work (we are given glimpses of this screenplay and rather doubt it has a future).  More broadly, Chip with his knowledge of high-end literary theory and critical Marxism, wishes to correct the entire decadent western world – and his arrogance is such that he really think he can do this via his university teaching.  One of the particularly funny scenes is where he is confronted by his students: a hostile bunch of Generation Y-ers, sick of deconstructing advertisements and being urged to hate the corporations they depend on.  In this scene, light though it is, we have a nucleus of current stand-offs between those who can see through the manipulative operations of corporations and resent it (Generation X) and those who see it but accept it (Generation Y).  This is where Franzen gives us so much more than just a family saga – he has his finger on the pulse of contemporary (sub)culture-clashes and is able to deliver up a depth of ideas without compromising the narrative thrust of his family of characters (and they are characters!). 

Mother Enid wishes to correct her children’s lives, to set them on the straight-and-narrow path like other people’s children, so she can swap boasting stories with her suburban friends. Her husband Alfred’s worsening Alzheimers is in desperate need of correction, but can the new drugs hyped-up by powerful drug companies help?  There are all sorts of misapprehensions and misunderstandings which call out to be corrected but may never be… (Chip happily lets his parents think he is writing for the Wall Street Journal, when he is in fact proofreading legal documents).  How will this all pan out?

Franzen is at his best when presenting characters in their native habitats and at his worst when he takes them to other places.  I’m ambivalent about the worth of  a bizarre sub-plot in the middle, involving Chip and some dodgy semi-traitorous activities in Eastern Europe, which reads like it should belong in some other novel.  And yet… I have to admit it does give it an unhinged air, a sense of ‘anything could happen’, which pushes it to an edge which other social novels might not reach. 

A gem in Franzen’s work is his detailed description of the modern tyranny of stuff: in a world of cheap imported mass-produced goods, of bills and shares and tax returns, the modern resident of the western world is threatened with burial under an enormous, never-conquered mountain of pointless paperwork and broken un-fixable things.  How well he captures the strain of anxiety, always-running in the background, caused by the need to finally pay that bill, follow up that letter, find that souvenir from long-ago holidays… the strain of endless triviality is rendered with precision and sympathy and the suggestion is clear: to have so much stuff is a liability, and this one statement upends the American belief in the superiority of that country and its ways.  That’s where he shines – in capturing the ‘here and now’ of the crisis of American (and ergo any westerners’, to a lesser degree) middle-class experience.

The Corrections is a thoroughly enjoyable novel with some serious substance to it and characters who will stay with you.  Did it have to be so lengthy?  No (and on the whole we get rather too much of Chip as a character – the descriptions of his bodily functions and variety of obsessions wear thin after a while),  but there’s a tradition of American male novelists writing big books – let’s put it down to peer pressure!  Reduced by a third, The Corrections would have been a masterpiece, but in its present form it is still exceptional in its balance of human stories (the gossipy epicentre of all good novels) and the Big Ideas.   

Verdict: A thoroughly entertaining family saga with persuasive characterisation and big ideas, intelligently presented.  Overly-long but worth going the distance.

Watch out for: Nine years after The Corrections Franzen has published another Big Novel, Freedom (2010) , which I'll review later in the year.  Also check out an interesting interview with Franzen in The Onion, in which he presents his views on the craft of writing – in a nutshell: block out the outside world, superglue the internet portal of your computer so you can’t be distracted by the net, and just write.

The Slap – Christos Tsiolkas (2008)

And now for something Australian…the premise of this novel (soon to be a TV series) is of a barbecue-stopping event: a spoilt child gets over-excited, annoys the entire party and gets himself slapped, but – shock! – not by his own parents.  Of course this much-read novel is not really about the slap at all, but about the tensions between multiple ‘tribes’ which exist in modern cities like Melbourne (where this novel is set).  Here are just some of the tensions  between groups Tsiolkas presents:

  • The Anglos look down upon the Greeks
  • The Greeks look down upon the Indians
  • The religious look down upon the irreligious
  • The parents look down upon the childless
  • The home-owners look down upon the renters, etc..

The world of The Slap is a multicultural dystopia, a world of constant mistrust, of ‘sticking to one’s own’, of punishing those who dare to stray outside their original tribe.  And yet the irony, which Tsiolkas points out through the actions of his characters, is that they are all often shifting from one cultural world to another, changing between them as is convenient and indeed belonging to multiple groups.  People are not really consistent, as Tsiolkas shows us repeatedly. 

The ‘slap’ of the title is a mere precursor to a staggering list of errant behaviour  – rape, adultery, alcoholism, etc – but these events change colour depending on which tribe’s point of view we are given access to by Tsiolkas.  Cleverly, he twists us around, makes us see the other side, and what emerges is not this or that event but the event’s situation within the value scheme of a particular character.  Friendships and families are divided and loyalties are tested; new alliances are formed.  It’s all very political – a kind of rise and fall of many little empires that make up the human networks in a big city.

We get a genuine sense of the city and of the changes that happen to it over time.  As one Greek-Australian character muses about Melbourne’s inner city suburbs:

The houses had not seemed so pretty back then, they had seemed small, ugly and squat.  Now that the wogs had moved out and the yuppies had moved in, the houses had been renovated, beautified, the streets stank of money…

Tsiolkas captures these sociological shifts and a sense of uneasiness among the newly moneyed generations that urban development has not brought about the utopia their migrant parents had hoped for.

A warning: from the first page the reader will be plunged into the murky sexist / violent workings of (some) males’ minds.  Tsiolkas is reporting this behaviour, not endorsing it, but those who are queasy about explicit misogyny should take heed. Furthermore, a weakness of the book is Tsiolkas’ female characters: all but one I found unconvincing.  We are allowed (indeed, have forced upon us) access to the mental states of the male characters, but the female characters, who often act against their own interests, are relatively opaque.

Tsiolkas is no racist or monoculturalist (see link to an interview with him below) – he values the diversity of cultures he has grown up with, but the focus of this particular novel is on divisions rather than connections between people.  That the messages in this book are largely negative – warnings rather than recommendations – may make it too dark overall for some readers, but the fearless presentation of a complex urban reality makes it worth a reader’s forbearance.

Verdict: A dark novel of substance, imperfectly executed, and a great debate-starter. 

Read and… check out this interesting interview with Tsiolkas at the Edinburgh Festival: , in which he talks about class, race, growing up Greek in Australia, etc. (And watch out for the TV series – but it’s never as good as the book, is it?)

 

We Need to Talk About Kevin by Lionel Shriver (2003)

There’s been much hype about this book, particularly since the making of a high profile movie this year starring Tilda Swinton.  The hype is perhaps not surprising given the novel’s subject matter: all you need to know about the plot is that it revolves around a Columbine-style school massacre carried out by the narrator’s son.  Happily, this novel does live up to its reputation.  It’s written – skilfully – in an old-school ‘epistilatory’ style,  (i.e. ‘Dear Franklin….’.)  This style can sometimes seem claustrophobic and stilted, but Shriver makes you believe in the narrator’s voice, this bewildered mother, ‘Eva’,  trying to make sense of her son’s extreme actions, and wisely pads out descriptions and conversations such that the reader is not frustrated with being confined to one person’s letters.

It’s worth noting that this is the first whole book I’ve read on an electronic reader (the Kindle) and I can report that I definitely ‘forgot’ I was not reading a paper book, so engrossed was I in the narrative.  In fact, my first taste of this book came through downloading a ‘sample’ and from the first ‘letter’ (addressed, as all the letters, to the narrator’s husband) I was hooked -  testimony to Shriver’s formidable story-telling ability.  Painstakingly, letter by letter, every angle and every implication of the crime is examined, through delving into the family’s often very painful past.  And the character of Kevin, the schoolmate-massacring son, is surely one of the most repulsive, mother-scaring characters in the history of literature – up there with Pinkie in Brighton Rock – yes, that evil!

It’s been called a ‘feminist novel’, which is true enough: Shriver knows her politics, understands contemporary culture and for every current debate and argument has a counterargument ready to go, e.g. ‘Bad kids are caused by bad mothers’ versus ‘Some kids are just born evil’.   Eva is not the most likeable character but modern women all over the world will relate to her honesty about the disproportionate burden of childrearing that is placed upon women.  However, Shriver cleverly pitches the politics of the novel in the realms of ambiguity by repeatedly confronting the liberal Eva with challenges to her politics from such characters as her old-school Republican husband and spookily precocious and aggressively argumentative son.

By setting the reader up to care about her characters, Shriver moves us with more and more layers of the tragedy, leaving the reader genuinely affected and haunted by an impressive ending.  Overall, this is an eminently intelligent novel, which proffers no easy answers nor definitive theories, but offers enough contemporary substance to fuel dinner party conversations for years to come.

 Verdict:  Intelligent, thought-provoking and a page-turner.

Watch out for: The twist towards the end – will stay in your memory.