Sunday, March 30, 2008

'In the Wake' by Per Petterson

Inthewake

4stars Fiction - paperback; Vintage; 202 pages; 2007. (Translated from the Norwegian by Anne Born.)

Judging by the amount of Scandinavian crime fiction hitting our shelves these days, anyone would be forgiven for thinking that this was the only genre Scandinavian writers were capable of creating. Thank goodness, then, for Per Petterson. This Norwegian writer has penned one short-story collection and six novels, although only two have been translated into English (a third, In Siberia, is due out at the end of the year) and they are as far from crime thrillers as you can imagine.

The beautiful, introspective Out Stealing Horses was published to critical acclaim in its native Norway in 2003, but it didn't hit the big time until it was translated into English and scooped the Independent Foreign Prize for Fiction in 2006. Suddenly Norway's best kept literary secret was out of the bag and English-language readers like me clamoured for more. Cue the translation of In the Wake, a novel that predates Out Stealing Horses by three years, but which feels more accomplished and -- if it is possible -- more touching, more painful and more despondent.

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Friday, March 14, 2008

'A House in the Country' by Jocelyn Playfair

Houseincountry 3stars Fiction - paperback; Persephone Books; 264 pages; 2002.

There's nothing quite like reading a Persephone Book: the weighty feel of them in the hand, the beautiful endpapers, the creamy pages and the strangely old-fashioned Baskerville font feels like such a delicious treat. I'd been saving this one up for a special "occasion". I figured it would be perfect holiday reading, curled up by the fire in a little cottage in Cornwall, free from the usual schedules and appointments that clutter up my life. Alas, A House in the Country was not the kind of book to be read with the brain in neutral. It's a deeply philosophical story to mull over and think about. Under normal circumstances I am sure I would have loved it. As a holiday read it failed to win me over.

Set in England in 1942, during the fall of Tobruk, this is a war novel told from a women's perspective. But, more importantly, it's a war novel that does not interpret events because, as Persephone points out in its catalogue, it was written in 1944 when the outcome of the Second World War was still uncertain. So, in essence, the flavour of the book is entirely authentic, a kind of postcard from the past that describes what life was like for those in England who were far removed from the battlefields of Europe.

The central character, Cressida Chance, is 38-year-old widow who runs a grand Georgian house in the country. Here she has numerous paying house guests whom she entertains, feeds and looks after, including her formidable elderly aunt, who visits regularly from London, and Tori, a gentleman from an unidentified European country, who has fled the war with nothing more than the clothes on his back.

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Sunday, March 09, 2008

'The Tenderness of Wolves' by Stef Penney

Tendernessofwolves 3stars Fiction - paperback; Quercus; 466 pages; 2007.

When Laurent Jammet, a French settler, is found brutally murdered in his shack in the frontier township of Dove River a whole chain of events is set in motion.

It is 1867 and life on the edge of the Canadian wilderness is tough. It's even tougher when you decide to hunt the killer by trekking through the Arctic snow, which is what Mrs Ross, an immigrant from the Scottish Highlands, decides to do when her teenage son, Francis, is accused of the crime.

But this is more than one woman's tale. There are stories within stories in this cleverly crafted novel, which scored Stef Penney the Costa Book of the Year in 2006. We meet a whole cast of divergent characters, each of whom has their own reasons for finding the murderer.

There is Parker, a half-breed Cherokee, who is arrested for the crime but later escapes and helps Mrs Ross on her trek; John Scott, a wealthy landowner who runs a dry goods store, and is privy to local gossip; Andrew Knox, the elderly magistrate, and his two daughters, the beautiful Susannah and the plain but intelligent Maria; Donald Moody, the young somewhat green Company employee who is charged with investigating the crime, along with his colleagues Mackinley, the factor of Fort Edgar, who has a penchant for taking the law into his own hands, and Jacob, a half-breed who serves as Donald's bodyguard; and Thomas Sturrock, an old journalist, who once befriended the dead man and seems intent on finding a special bone carving that he feels should be willed to him.

To complicate matters further, there are two sub-plots running throughout this book. The first involves the mysterious disappearance of two teenage girls 15 years earlier. Amy and Eve Seton, daughters of the local doctor, went on a picnic with their friend Cathy but were never seen again. The second involves Line, a Norwegian immigrant, who lives in a religious settlement north of Dove River but wishes to escape with her children and her lover.

All these characters and storylines combine to create a rather powerful if somewhat disjointed narrative. This is further complicated by Mrs Ross telling her side of the story in first-person while everyone else takes it in turn, chapter by chapter, to have theirs narrated in the third-person. I'm not sure this narrative approach entirely works, especially when it comes to the climax which is told from so many points of view it loses its immediate impact.

The greatest failing, in my opinion, is the lack of resolution in several narrative threads, which weakens the novel and leaves the reader slightly frustrated when they finally get to the last page.

But Penney's writing style, on a whole, is confident and perfectly captures frontier life. Her descriptions of the snowy wilderness and the resultant isolation and loneliness are pitch-perfect. Perhaps that's why this book has been so lauded, as you'd be hard pressed to read another debut novel that so expertly conveys an unfamiliar world in such an immediately familiar way. But personally, I just felt The Tenderness of Wolves lacked the narrative hook to keep me reading -- and judging by all the glowing accounts online I may, just possibly, be the only person to feel this way.

Sunday, June 03, 2007

'Rant' by Chuck Palahniuk

Rant 2stars Fiction - hardcover; Jonathan Cape; 336 pages; 2007. REVIEW COPY.

Chuck Palahniuk is one of my favourite authors. He has a distinctive, often experimental, style that mixes black humour with scathing satire. The result is often a very funny, completely surreal, rollicking good read. But his new novel -- subtitled The Oral History of Buster Casey -- fails to deliver the usual offbeat and inspired narrative I have come to expect.

Rant is essentially a story about a now-dead wayward weirdo -- Buster L "Rant" Casey -- who is responsible for an urban plague of rabies and other "pranks" across America. It is set in a technologically advanced dystopian future in which people are separated into two distinct groups -- daytimers and nighttimers.  The nighttimers, who come out when it is dark, spend a large proportion of their time Party Crashing. This is a sport in which participants deliberately cause car accidents in a rather destructive and surreal version of a demolition derby.

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Sunday, November 19, 2006

'Out Stealing Horses' by Per Petterson

Outstealinghorses_1 4stars_90 Fiction - paperback; Vintage; 264  pages; 2006. (Translated from the Norwegian  by Anne Born.)

This is a delightful, thought-provoking and ethereal book by an author the Independent describes as "one of Norway's finest living writers". It's a relatively simple story tinged with nostalgia about a 67-year-old man's remembrance of things past and how events in the summer of 1948 shaped the rest of his life.

The narrator, Trond, is a widower who has lost touch with his children. He is living the life of a recluse in an isolated part of Norway with his faithful dog Lyra. By a strange coincidence his only neighbour, another elderly man, whom he stumbles upon by chance, is someone he has not seen since that fateful summer. This brings some painful memories to the surface and forces Trond to recall what happened all those years ago.

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Monday, August 07, 2006

'Three Dollars' by Elliot Perlman

Three_dollars4stars_85Fiction - paperback; Faber and Faber; 368  pages; 1999.

Eddie Harnovey, a 38-year-old chemical engineer, is married to a brilliant academic with whom he has a young daughter. He has a lovely house in the suburbs, a strong moral conscience and a kind, friendly nature. He is intelligent and well educated. Why, then, is his world falling around his feet? Why is he on the brink of bankruptcy with just $3 to his name?

This is the premise behind Elliot Perlman's award-winning debut novel Three Dollars.

Essentially it charts the rise -- and spectacular fall -- of a young man, who could have had everything but looks set to lose it all, including his home and his marriage.

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Monday, July 17, 2006

'The Yellow Wallpaper and Other Writings' by Charlotte Perkins Gilman

Yellowwallpaper3stars_39Fiction - paperback; Bantam Classics; 272  pages; 1994

This small tome features Charlotte Perkins Gilman's most famous story, The Yellow Wallpaper (first published in 1899), along with a selection of fiction (seven short stories and several excerpts from Herland) and non-fiction (excerpts from Women and Economics: A Study of the Economic Relation Between Men and Women and The Man-made World: Our Androcentric Culture).

According to the blurb on the back of the book, the author was an "enormously influential American feminist and sociologist", so it's no surprise to find that all her writing -- fiction and non-fiction alike -- concerns itself with the state of women in the early Twentieth Century. Such themes seem surprisingly before their time, but they were written during the height of the movement for Women's Suffrage -- although women in the United States did not get full voting rights until 1920 -- when such things must have been at the forefront of female minds.

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Tuesday, February 07, 2006

'Seven Types of Ambiguity' by Elliot Perlman

Seventypes_45stars_14Fiction - paperback; Faber and Faber; 624  pages; 2005.

At last. A book by an Australian novelist that isn't about convicts or the pioneers or soldiers heading off to the Great War. This one is, in fact, set in modern times - or the economic rationalistic 1990s anyway.

What's more it's set in the Australian city I know best - Melbourne - at a time when I was a resident. How wonderful to recognise names and places in the pages of this well-crafted novel: I have downed many an ice-cold beer at The Esplanade Hotel, drooled over the cakes that line the bakeries along St Kilda's Acland Street, gone shopping (for books!) in Chapel Street, admired the mansions in Toorak, seen the beach at the end of Glenhuntly Road, walked along the streets of Sorrento.  

American readers, British readers will not understand this, because they are collectively spoilt by so many modern novels set in their homelands. But for me, as an Australian, I can't tell you how refreshing it was as a reader to recognise such places in the pages of a book that wasn't non-fiction. I don't know why, but it made the story all that more real, and all that more special, to me.

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Saturday, July 02, 2005

'Survivor' by Chuck Palahniuk

Survivor4stars_18Fiction - paperback; Vintage; 289 pages; 1999

This is typical Palahniuk fare: surreal, outlandish and completely over-the-top.

This oh-so brilliant satire on fame and religion is a gripping read from the first word.

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Sunday, February 27, 2005

'My Sister's Keeper' by Jodi Picoult

My_sisters_keeper_13stars_12Fiction - paperback; Coronet Books; 448 pages; 2005

 This is an intriguing and intelligent book about a moral and ethical medical dilemma: is it OK to conceive a genetically matched child so that the baby's cord blood cells can be donated to her older sister who is sick and dying from a rare blood disorder?  And if the "designer baby" is continually "used" to help her sister, should she be able to say no at any point?

After a lifetime of medical procedures to help her sister, 13-year-old Anna decides she has had enough and takes the drastic step of suing her parents for the rights to her own body. The outfall is, obviously, emotionally powerful: anger and heartbreak mixed with confusion, pain and disbelief. The mother's initial reactions are particularly telling.

Continue reading "'My Sister's Keeper' by Jodi Picoult" »

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Books read in 2008

An Irish Writers' Year




  • During 2008 I plan to read one piece of work by each of the following Irish literary greats:
    * Brendan Behan
    * Flann O'Brien
    * George Bernard Shaw
    * James Joyce
    * John Millington Synge
    * Johnathan Swift
    * Oliver Goldsmith
    * Oscar Wilde
    * Patrick Kavanagh
    * Samuel Beckett
    * Sean O'Casey
    * William Butler Yeats.

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