Bookblog #51: Book Club Xmas presents
Kate Grenville, The Lieutenant (Text Publishing
2008)Christos Tsiolkas, The
Slap (Allen & Unwin
2008)These were Penny's and my
presents from the Book Club Secret Santa/Kris Kringle in December. They're both
novels we'd been planning to read, both much praised in the
press.
The Lieutenant was mine, and I was delighted to receive it -- my interest
had been piqued by hearing Kate Grenville talk charmingly -- and passionately --
about it at Gleebooks and then again on the Book Show. I think, though, that when I
came to read it, I suffered from having heard too much, and the story remained
for too long something I was being told about rather than something that was
happening for me as I read. I was disorientated by the policy of renaming
historical characters. I suppose the reason for this was to avoid being taken to
task by grumpy old historians. You know, if someone were to say, 'But the
evidence is clear that Arthur Phillip was not an authoritarian, culturally
blinkered careerist,' the novelist could reply, 'But this is a fictional
first Governor of New South Wales called Gilbert, not the historical Phiilips at
all.' The trouble is, given that the pithy core of the book is an actual
document, which kate Grenville has been careful to tell us provides every word
of the conversation between her lieutenant hero and the young Aboriginal woman
who befriends him, the novel is clearly meant to be an imagining of the actual
early colony, and such arguments would be so much blown smoke. The result is a
kind of roman à clef effect: is Silk, actually Watkin Tench? which
of the Aboriginal men is Bennelong? etc. Now that I'm dropping in bits of
French, I might as well say that there's also something of the roman à
thèse about the book, in the sense that one feels that the characters
are there not so much for their own sake as for what they can show us about the
meeting of cultures in Port Jackson in 1788. When I wrote in this blog about Kate Grenville's
previous book, I used the word 'bodiless'. There's something un-fleshed about
this one too. All the same, it's about one of the most interesting subjects I
can imagine: the meeting of two mutually uncomprehending cultures in the form of
two people establishing a delicate intimacy, against the odds and ephemeral.
That it is tightly based on Lieutenant Dawes's actual notebook on the Gadigal
language gives it enormous moral force. By the end I was weeping copiously.
As I mentioned earlier,
The Slap accounted for exactly half of the books in the Secret Santa/Kris
Kringle. Clearly, sight unseen, we'd all decided it was worth a read. It would
be hard to imagine a greater contrast to The Lieutenant. While we are
told that Kate Grenville's hero has an active sex life, it happens discreetly
offstage. The Slap treats us in great detail to any number of sexual
encounters, or perhaps I should say event, since 'encounter' implies a meeting
of some kind. (Actually the sex in this book reminded me my childhood curiosity
about characters in books going to the toilet. It's as if this book decides it's
going to show the sexual things that are usually glossed over, but the result is
mostly very unconvincing.) I read the first third or so aloud to Penny on three
longish car trips. At a certain point she refused to have me read any more, not
just because of the sex and the tediously undifferentiated obscenity of much of
the dialogue, but because she just didn't want to go where the plot was
signalling its intention of taking us. I read on, mostly out of a sense of duty,
and it turned out the signals were misleading. I can't say it was a pleasant
read, but in the end it was an impressive one. In case anyone reading this
doesn't know, the story deals with an interwoven group of family and friends in
suburban Melbourne. A man slaps a child at a barbecue: the man is Greek, the
child's parents are 'skip' and embedded in victim identities. Though the back
cover blurb says that the book is about 'the slap and its consequences', I read
it more as using the slap as a device that provided a slender unifying narrative
thread to the novel's eight parts, each of which is told from the point of view
of a different person who was at the fateful barbecue. A young girl gets
plastered with her friends at an end-of-school party; an old man confronts his
own mortality at the funeral of an old friend; several marriages are revealed as
built on compromise -- variously generous, self-sacrificing, resentful. There
are lies about sex, half-truthful confessions of infidelity, a shocking betrayal
of trust. For me, perhaps the finest thing is the tender–tough revelation
of what drives the neurotic and vicious mother of the child who is slapped, so
that we move from loathing and despising her to recognising her tragedy. The
writing is pretty rough at times, and I think that people who say it's
wonderful to have a book with such a compelling plot haven't read much
children's or young adult writing. I'm not rushing out to find all Christos'
other books, but my sense of what it is to be alive, human and suburban
Australian has been expanded.
Posted: Wed - January 14, 2009 at 01:43 PM
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This started out as a patchy journal about family life with my mother-in-law, Mollie, who has Alzheimers and was then living with us. Mollie has moved, first into a "low-care facility" then, in July 2004, into a nursing home. As these and other events have overtaken us, the blog has moved on ...
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Published On: Jan 22, 2009 06:25 AM
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