Questions of Travel
The 2013 Miles Franklin Award was announced today, and I am so pleased that the judges have chosen Questions of Travel, by Michelle de Kretser.

There were other really beaut books in the shortlist, but I feel that this one fulfils all my criteria for a worthy winner.  It’s delicious to read, it’s thought-provoking, it’s about modern multicultural Australia, it’s about contemporary social issues – and people will still be reading it in years to come and agreeing that it’s a great book.

Check out a Sensational Snippet here, and my enthusiastic review here.

Congratulations to the author, her editor and the team at Allen and Unwin!

PS Many thanks to the publicist at Honner media for the helpful email announcement – at 1.32om :)

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Posted by: Lisa Hill | June 18, 2013

In the Memorial Room, by Janet Frame


In the Memoiral roomThere’s a real irony implicit in this amusing book by New Zealand author Janet Frame (1924-2004).  She wrote it to satirise the fetishisation of another Kiwi author, Katherine Mansfield, but now Frame herself is on a similar kind of pedestal …

Released posthumously in accordance with Frame’s instructions, In the Memorial Room is a wicked black comedy. Written in the 1970s, it was withheld from publication because it’s so obviously based on Frame’s own experience in Menton, France, as a recipient of the Katherine Mansfield Fellowship.   It’s very witty, but as is obvious from the Sensational Snippet I posted a day or so ago, it’s not hard to see how it would have ruffled feathers if it had been published 40 years ago.

Frame, however, is too good an author to pen just an everyday satire.  It’s easy to poke fun at people who take themselves and their devotion to the object of their admiration too seriously.   But Frame also explores some serious undercurrents: what kind of identity does an author have when she is inhabiting her characters with intensity?  And what is lost by agreeable people when they adapt themselves too slavishly to the demands of others because they fear revealing their true selves?

Harry Gill, 33 years old and the author of two moderately successful novels, is the recipient of the Watercress-Armstrong Fellowship, a scholarship set up in memory of the revered New Zealand poet, Margaret Rose Hurndell.  Her devotees have (much like the devotees of Katherine Mansfield, who also died young) set up a ‘memorial room’ in the former larder of the house where she stayed in Menton.  The room is cold, bleak, dark and desolate, and to Harry it feels like a tomb.

A unique memorial, to pay a writer to work within a tomb!  I felt, however, that if the sheer physical discomfort (there was no access to running water or toilet, little light, and little warmth – what need have the dead of these? – and in the course of my day’s work I would spend several hours in this one place) could be ignored (though unhappily it could not) I should find in the grave-like aspect of this room, in spite of the roar of the construction machinery in the many apartments being built nearby and the constant close passing of trains, all of which became somehow insulated when one thought of oneself in a grave where one could not be reached, a sanctuary for working. (p. 45)

(Harry, as you can see, a few problems with tangled sentence construction – so we hope he has a good editor).

But it is not just that the room he is expected to work in is so uncongenial, it’s that the Fellowship committee and the relations of the dead poet are also resident in Menton, and they do more than cramp his style.  They have their own expectations of Harry, and because he’s ‘an habitual agreer’ he  can’t express his dismay about the way they impose the cult of the dead poet on him.  These characters are all mutually incomprehensible to each other.

One of the most annoying ones is Michael Watercress, a would-be author himself as well as the handsome son of Connie and Max Watercress.  (You will have noticed of course that the scholarship is named after the devotees, not the object of their devotion, i.e. the poet herself).  Michael is handsome, and tall, and he looks like an author, whereas Harry, alas, looks so unlike an author that it is Michael who is photographed by the press at the reception in Wellington and is believed to be the recipient of the Fellowship by most of the good folk of Menton.  This turns out to be especially annoying when Harry has an existential crisis and the committee would like to rescind the fellowship in favour of … well, you can guess, can’t you?

I don’t want to spoil the stylish plotting of this clever novel, so I will simply alert you to Frame’s interest in this issue: what happens to one’s sense of self when shutting out the static of other people invading your life becomes an all-encompassing preoccupation?  When the reader remembers Janet Frame’s own history of mental illness, it becomes apparent that for all the novel’s breeziness, the author is sharing the stigma that comes with mental illness.  You won’t be able to resist a cheer when Harry stands up for himself at last …

PS I am an unabashed fan of Katherine Mansfield. I have reviewed two of her books here and I loved Kathleen Jones biography as well.

Author: Janet Frame
Title: In the Memorial Room
Publisher: Text Publishing, 2013
ISBN: 9781922147134
Review copy courtesy of Text Publishing

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Posted by: Lisa Hill | June 17, 2013

2013 Prime Minister’s Literary Awards


The 2013 Prime Minister’s Literary Awards shortlists was announced today:

Fiction shortlist

Poetry shortlist

  • Burning Rice by Eileen Chong
  • The Sunlit Zone by Lisa Jacobson
  • Jam Tree Gully: Poems by John Kinsella
  • Liquid Nitrogen by Jennifer Maiden, see Amber Beilharz’s Guest Review
  • Crimson Crop by Peter Rose

Non-fiction shortlist

  • Bradman’s War by Malcolm Knox
  • Uncommon Soldier by Chris Masters
  • Plein Airs and Graces by Adrian Mitchell, see my review
  • The Australian Moment by George Megalogenis
  • Bold Palates by Barbara Santich, , see my review

Prize for Australian history shortlist

  • The Sex Lives of Australians: A History by Frank Bongiorno
  • Sandakan by Paul Ham
  • Gough Whitlam by Jenny Hocking
  • Farewell, dear people by Ross McMullin
  • The Censor’s Library by Nicole Moore (I’m currently reading this and it’s a terrific book!)

Young adult fiction shortlist

Children’s fiction shortlist

  • Red by Libby Gleeson
  • Today We Have No Plans by Jane Godwin and illustrated by Anna Walker
  • What’s the Matter, Aunty May? by Peter Friend and illustrated by Andrew Joyner
  • The Beginner’s Guide to Revenge by Marianne Musgrove

Congratulations to all the authors, editors and publishers!


In the Memoiral roomIn the Memorial Room is a wicked black comedy by Janet Frame (1924-2004), released posthumously now in 2013 in accordance with her instructions – in case it offended certain people …

Was this one of them, I wonder?

I watched Connie, bent over her sheet of paper, drawing with a large blue crayon, absorbed in her work.  Her face was permanently pale with the kind of makeup which suppresses colour in the cheeks.  Her cheekbones were high and rather narrowed her small blue eyes.  She too was stockily built and dressed usually in a  tweed costume such as New Zealand women wear to the horse races at Addington and Avondale, and her evening wear to the receptions and dinners for the Watercress-Armstrong Fellow was usually a dress of dark shimmering materials, and she carried a small spangled evening bag.  Her hands, grasping the crayon, were plump and floury.  When she spoke, French or English, she spoke slowly, almost mechanically, with a swaying motion of her body as if she had within her some instrument for winding her words, in sentence-containers, up from a great depth where they had fallen or been banished; sometimes one felt as if she herself had gone away down into the rock to hack them out and shake them clean – a long slow process which made her listeners impatient: usually Max or Michael took over the telling of a long story when the words to fit it appeared to be growing scarce.

from In the Memorial Room by Janet Frame, Text Publishing, 2013, p 54

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Posted by: Lisa Hill | June 15, 2013

The Girls of Slender Means, by Muriel Spark


The Girls of Slender MeansLucky me!  This is another gorgeous book sent to me for review by the Folio Society, and I am starting to think that I could very easily get used to reading books so beautifully presented … Generously spaced type makes these Folio books easy on the eye for reading, and the expensive papers and buckram boards make them a pleasure to hold in the hand.   This new edition of The Girls of Slender Means by Muriel Spark comes with a sparkling introduction by A.L. Kennedy,  and it’s illustrated in a suitably quirky style (see here) by Lyndon Hayes, with an intriguing cover to match.  (Yes, that is a scantily clad young woman climbing out of a skylight).   The book is almost too gorgeous to put back into its slipcase after reading, but if I want to protect it properly as a collector’s item, that is what I ought to do.

I read and enjoyed The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1961) a good while ago now, and while I enjoyed it very much,  The Girls of Slender Means (1963) is now my favourite.  It’s a slim novella of only 100 pages or so, but every word is perfectly placed and is generously allusive.  Re-readings reveal all kinds of meaning beyond the sparkling wit and black humour.  That’s why the book is listed in 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die (2006 edition) where it is said to be derived from Gerard Manley Hopkins’ long poem, The Wreck of the DeutschlandIt took me a little while to work out why: it is because of the manner in which a woman goes to her death, unafraid, because she is sustained by her faith even when it has been sorely tested by fate.

A startling death in the present is the trigger for flashbacks to London at the time of the cessation of European hostilities in May 1945.  The war in Japan is still raging but for the characters it is out of sight and out of mind as the infrastructure of wartime Britain segues into post-war austerity.  ‘Long ago in 1945 all the nice people in England were poor’ begins Chapter One, when, a week after VE Day, Londoners looked out at the rubble and knew that things would never be the same again.  There are hints of Britain’s multicultural future in the ‘infants of experimental variety, delightful in hue of skin and racial structure … born to the world in the due cycle of nine months‘ after the celebrations outside Buckingham Palace (p. 11), and the days when Englishmen could stamp about the world expecting deference to their ‘superior’ religion are gone too, as a religious convert is to discover when he tries proselytising in Haiti.  But it is the world of women which has changed irrevocably, though they don’t know it yet.

As in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, women are the focus of this story.  They all live together in a mansion now converted to a boarding house, elevated to shabby respectability by virtue of its name and antecedents: it was founded  by a royal and thus bears the name of the May of Teck Club. It is distinguished by a ballroom long since converted to a dormitory which was the home of ‘the very youngest girls between eighteen and twenty who had not long moved out of the cubicles of school dormitories’ (p. 19), while above this are the shared bedrooms mostly inhabited by ‘young women in transit’ and two ‘spinsters’ in their fifties, Collie and Jarvie, who had somehow circumvented the rules by which the Club operates, ‘for the Pecuniary Convenience and Social Protection of Ladies of Slender Means below the age of Thirty Years, who are obliged to reside apart from their Families in order to follow an Occupation in London’  (p.5).  The second floor held the ‘old maids of settled character and various ages, those who had decided on a spinster’s life, and those who would one day do so, but had not discerned the fact for themselves’. (p. 20)

Spark’s clever classifications of these women, ‘prim and pretty virgins’ and ‘bossy ones’ in their late 20s on the third floor, and the ‘most attractive, sophisticated and lively girls’ on the fourth floor, is emblematic of a sorting system which grades women as marriageable, or not.  Such jobs as they have are desultory, and linked to their status in class-conscious Britain.  Options include, for Jane Martin the would-be brainy one, a ‘literary-intellectual’ secretarial role for a publisher, and for Joanna Childe, self-employment giving elocution lessons (offering discounts for such members of the May of Teck who need help to modify a ‘regional’ accent.)  Joanne, daughter of a country curate, is clinging to a hopeless love long after she could have had the love of another ‘who had made it clear that he wanted Joanna as the former curate had not’ (p. 16)  The set also includes Dorothy Markham, who ‘could emit, at any hour of the day or night, a waterfall of débutante chatter’ (p. 32); breathtakingly beautiful but callous Selina Redwood; and Anne Baberton – who has refined the art of mild insult in order ‘to indicate affectionate scorn’ when required (p. 8).  There is also Greggie, another ‘spinster’ circumventing the rules – whose favourite anecdote concerns the unexploded bomb that she is convinced is in the garden.

Then (as now) there is a preoccupation with dieting, one practical application of which is that slim girls can slither through the lavatory skylight window to sunbathe (or hold assignations with next-door lovers) on the roof.  (The trapdoor to the roof had been blocked up long ago after a now apocryphal intruder (burglar or lover) had ‘left behind him a legend of many screams in the night’ (p. 21).  Jane Wright is excluded from these ventures because she is too plump, and Anne and Selina can only manage it if they slather themselves with soap or margarine, both of which are still rationed.  Dorothy can do it too, but Nancy Riddle gets stuck, and so does Tilly, a visitor with a sense of fun.

Jane’s intellectual pretensions are some consolation for her unfortunate shape.  She works for George Johnson, a dubious publisher with dubious finances, and this gains her entrée to literary soirées where she meets (and fancies) the poet Nicholas Farringdon.  He uses her shamelessly to facilitate his attraction to Selina, to which Jane responds by abandoning her loyalty to Johnson who expects her to help him  manipulate his authors into contracts more beneficial to him than to them.

Muriel Spark’s witty tone and black humour seduces the reader into believing that The Girls of Slender Means is merely a wry social commentary, but there is more to it than that.  Scraps of poems signal religious overtones that might otherwise be opaque, and the apocalyptic ending reveals Selina to be perfidious indeed.

Carol Shields has written an illuminating piece for The Guardian about the difference between reading this in the 1960s as a young woman and again in 2003 – but there is a spoiler which I am glad I did not see before reading the book, so take care.   I found an original 1963 NY Times review online as well, and found that interesting – but again, read it afterwards.

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The Secret Lives of MenGeorgia Blain - shortlisted for numerous awards, including the NSW and SA premier’s literary awards, and the Nita B. Kibble Award – is the author of  five novels, three of which  I have read and reviewed: Candelo (1999); The Blind Eye (2003) and Names for Nothingness (2005).  She has also written essays, a memoir called Births, Deaths and Marriages and a recent YA novel called Darkwater but The Secret Lives of Men is her first collection of short stories.   Regular guest reviewer Karenlee Thompson explains why she found this collection uneven:

The title story of this loose collection by Georgia Blain is a perfect example of short story as mini-novella.   An unabashed fan of the short story myself (in all its snapshot, slice-of-life permutations), I nevertheless understand that some people find them confusing.  Regular complaints about short stories include:  It wasn’t a real story or nothing was resolved, even there’s no proper beginning or ending. For those people, ‘The Secret Lives of Men’ (the short story, not the collection) will be appreciated.  It is a lesson in how any story – long or short – can be built. Blain gives us a clear setting, thoroughly fleshed-out characters, a steady ascent to the climax and a satisfying denouement, all with an economical and precise use of words.

In this first piece, the small-town dress uniform – moleskin jeans and striped cotton shirt – is given some ‘panache’ when worn by the desirable Alastair.  Clearly, Alistair’s death is shrouded in mystery.   The story is propelled, not just by the mystery we crave to understand but also by the depth of feeling – a deep abiding sadness – expressed through perfect word choice and hauntingly lyrical prose:

I would wake in the early afternoon and see us both in that sharp light, Alistair still beautiful, eyes closed, skin pale gold, and I would wish that I was someone else (p. 13).

It’s a heart-wrenching story that hinted a promise for the twelve to follow.

Alas, for me, that promise was not upheld.  I found many of the pieces too pared down, too free of adornment. Here and there, they bordered on the mundane.  I was unable to rustle up any empathy or understanding for Emma whose wedding comes about seemingly as a result of pure laziness in ‘Just a Wedding’ and I could find no sympathy for the widower Pete in ‘The Bad Dog Park’.

Occasionally, it seems that Blain loses control of her characters.  Without the luxury of a novel’s pages to build up personalities with distinctive traits, it would have been safer to limit their numbers.  The line-up was confusing in ‘The Other Side of the River’, in ‘Her Boredom Trick’ and even more so throughout ‘Mirrored’ despite the early – clunky – introductions:

I had brought my daughter, Anna, and Jude and Aisla had their son, Miles.  Sal, who had just left her girlfriend, had come on her own.  She had known Frans and Simon the longest, having once shared a flat with them, years ago. (p. 167)

‘Escape’ keeps a humorous slant on a potentially dangerous adventure through a glimpse into the divergent lives of the divorced parents of a twelve-year-old boy and his teenaged sister.  Their free-wheeling father lives in a messy light-filled house in the country surrounded by bush (‘Lawn belongs in Dullsville’) (p. 126) and he picks up his children in a frog-green Porsche Roadster.

In the final story ‘Flyover’, Blain returns to the prose style that promised so much in the opening piece with ‘apartment blocks pressed tight against the tangle of roads’ (p. 227), a courtyard gate ‘loose on its hinges from drunks and junkies trying to break in’ (p. 234) and she finishes on a high with a couple ‘trying to cut loose all the threads that had linked and tied [them] for  the past two years’ (p. 246).

Writing for The Australian, Stella Clarke finds the ‘unembellished’ style allows for ambiguity and she seems to admire these ‘unfussy accounts’.  Conversely, I would have like to see a bit more fuss, and considerably more embellishment in some of the stories.

The Age’s Peter Pierce finds Blain’s style ‘most affecting when plain’  but he also points to some confusion in stories where Blain ‘fails to untangle the welter of names with which we are greeted in the opening paragraphs’.

In the end, the excellent bookend stories are the saving grace so I might recommend the book purely for its ability to show that a solid beginning-middle-end story can be constructed in the short form.

© Karenlee Thompson

Karen Lee ThompsonKarenlee Thompson is an author and an occasional reviewer for The Australian and was featured on Meet an Aussie Author in 2011.  Her debut novel 8 States of Catastrophe is reviewed on the ANZ LitLovers blog here.  Karen blogs at Karen Lee Thompson.

Thanks, Karenlee, for once again contributing your expertise in analysing short story collections!

This review is cross-posted at Karen Lee Thompson.

Author: Georgia Blain
Title:  The Secret Lives of Men
Publisher:  Scribe Publications, 2013.
ISBN 9781922070357
Source: Review copy courtesy of Scribe Publications

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Posted by: Lisa Hill | June 14, 2013

My Beautiful Enemy, by Cory Taylor


My Beautiful EnemyI was a little bit disappointed by this book.  My Beautiful Enemy has all the right ingredients for a terrific novel, and in some ways it is exceptionally good – but somehow it didn’t quite hit the mark with me.

Cory Taylor is the award-winning author of Me and Mr Booker which won the Commonwealth Writers Prize for the Pacific Region.  She’s an author willing to take risks, and with My Beautiful Enemy has abandoned the rather predictable themes to which so many Australian authors surrender.   Set in Australia during World War II, My Beautiful Enemy is the story of a young man confused by his own sexuality and conflicted by his ambivalent attitudes towards the enemy.  Arthur Wheeler is a narcissistic and somewhat hypochondriac young soldier stationed at the Tatura Internment Camp when he meets – and is instantly attracted to – Stanley Ueno, a quixotic Japanese youth.

The story is narrated by Arthur and the elegiac tone is set by the wisdom of hindsight in the first paragraph:

Everybody has dreams about the life they might have led.  For years I mourned the life I could have shared with Stanley if only the times had been different.  I blamed my unhappiness on the war, and then I blamed it on my wives.  Now I see that I was unhappy for the same reasons as everyone else, at one time or another, is unhappy.  We define ourselves by what we do not have, by the people we are not, and we do this because we must. (p. 1)

Arthur’s infatuation is doomed from the outset.  He is enlisted in a homophobic organisation in a homophobic society, and even if Australia had not been engaged in a vicious war with Japan, Australian racism was institutionalised by the White Australia Policy.   Stanley, for his part, toys with Arthur, sometimes flirting with him  and at other times breaking his heart with disdain or hostility.   Like the other internees (many of whom had not lived in Japan for many years) he is torn between his affection for Australia and his loyalty to Japan, culminating in a dramatic attempt to stay here when the war is over and the Japanese are being deported.  For Arthur - aware of Japanese atrocities on the battlefield, witness to the grief of his bereaved girlfriend and subject to the demonising propaganda of the enemy that occurs in any war – passion for Stanley is tinged with anguished feelings of guilt and disloyalty.  The skill with which Taylor draws out these complex emotions in characters on either side of the military conflict is exceptional.

Secrecy, self-delusion and social isolation adds to Arthur’s torment.  Having cut ties with his family because of his abusive father, he longs for affection and deludes himself into more than one marriage doomed to failure.  However, while most of the characterisation in this novel is successful – especially the boozy matron who mothers the youths in the camp infirmary – Arthur’s first wife is never quite convincing as the devoted woman whose love for him blinds her to his flaws.  I also found it hard to believe that parents of that era would discourage the marriage: when girls got pregnant out of wedlock in those days there was little alternative to a hasty marriage.  But then, I found it similarly hard to believe that Arthur would use such coarse language in letters to his girlfriend May (p.72).  My knowledge of men of that generation was that while they swore like troopers in places like pubs and building sites from which women were excluded, they had a rather quaint notion of protecting women from bad language and would not tolerate it in family life.

However, it was the cinematic treatment of Arthur’s sudden decisions that, for me, made this novel falter.  It is rare for me to suggest that a book ought to be longer, but I felt that Arthur’s desertion of May, his impulsive departure for Japan and his sudden honesty with his son needed a firmer footing in the novel.  The reader suspects that these decisions are attempts at redemption but the social changes that would enable Arthur in later life to come to terms with his sexuality are missing from the background.

Phuong Dang at Japan in Melbourne admired the dialogue between Arthur and the other characters, and thought that Taylor’s skill as a scriptwriter possibly has something to do with this.   Portia Lindsay at Fancy Goods found it a heartfelt and beautifully written novel about love and war for readers of exquisitely crafted literary fiction, and Mark Dapin (author of Spirit House, a book I very much admired) at The Australian felt that the camp staff had more empathy for the internees than was credible but he sees great potential in Taylor’s writing.

And so do I.

Author: Cory Taylor
Title: My Beautiful Enemy
Publisher: Text Publishing, 2013
ISBN: 9781922079893
Source: Review copy courtesy of Text Publishing

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Posted by: Lisa Hill | June 12, 2013

Listening to Country, by Ros Moriarty


Listening to CountryAboriginal readers are advised that this review contains the names of deceased persons.

Listening to Country, by Ros Moriarty, is a passionate call to action on behalf of Australia’s indigenous people.  It was the 2012 winner of  The National Year of Reading 2012 Our Story Collection, and in 2010 was shortlisted for The Age Book of the Year Award Non-Fiction Prize and for the 2010 Human Rights Commission Literature Award.  The ANZ LitLovers reading group chose it for its June selection, where it segues nicely into Indigenous Literature Week at ANZ LitLovers (July 7-14). 

Ros Moriarty was only 21 and working as a researcher in the Department of Aboriginal Affairs in Canberra when she met her future husband; he was 39.  There was some dismay about their relationship, and it was not because of the age difference, it was because he was Aboriginal, of Yunwuni heritage, and she was not. Although she does not labour the point, it was just the first of many racist experiences in her marriage.  It is saddening to read that on road trips it was she who went into the motel to book a room, because if he did it, the motel was likely to be ‘full’.   Rental properties suffered the same mysterious instant transition to ‘unavailable’ too.  (As I write this, a highly influential television presenter  in Australia has made a racist ‘joke’ about an Aboriginal football star, and still kept his job.  We have a long, long way to go.)

Racism, however, is not the focal point of this memoir.  Rather, it’s the story of Ros Moriarty’s journey to belonging within her new family, a journey that takes her to Borroloola, saltwater country in the remote Northern Territory.

It seems an odd thing to say, but in a way, the couple were ‘lucky’ that they were able to connect with John’s family.  Aged four, with lighter skin because his father was an Irishman, John was stolen from his family under the assimilationist policies of the time.  They told his mother Kathleen Murrmayibinya that he was going to school for the day, and he never came back.  Mere chance led to John being reunited with his mother :

John counts his blessings that he found his mother again.  During a church holiday to Alice Springs when he was fifteen, a slight, dignified Aboriginal woman walked across the street to ask his name.  ‘John Moriarty’ he told her.  She replied, ‘I’m your mother.’ They just sat down by the side of the road on the ground, and touched hands.  ‘I’m sorry, my son, your grandmother’s gone,’ were her first words.  ‘Why did you let me go?’ were John’s.  It was the start of his journey home. Not right away, because the Protector of Aborigines sent Kathleen back north, and John back south.,  But John finally knew there was a place he would belong. (p. 20)

He was ‘lucky’ also that he has his own name, because many children taken from their families were arbitrarily re-named, sometimes with the name of the place they were taken from, and sometimes with mocking allusions such as Nosepeg John, or Mussolini.  Birthdays were assigned too: April 1 – April Fools Day,  or August 1 (the date allocated for all horses for administrative convenience).

For Ros, each journey north to reconnect with her husband’s family is a learning experience.  From the beginning, she is welcomed as a daughter-in-law, :

I feel the usual welling warmth of their embrace of John, of Tim and of me, a love that wraps around us like a mellow spreading thing.  Each time we return, the joy of it always takes me a little bit by surprise.  This broad extended family tucks its inclusion tightly round us. They tell us ‘I love you’, ‘I miss you’, ‘Too long since we see you, my son, my daughter-in-aw, my grandson’.  They give completely from deep inside.  Unaffected, no conditions, no question.  Not many words are needed.  The first time I came I knew I was transparent to them, from the inside out.  What I feel, what I think, if I am how I say I am.  I know they make allowances for me, excuse me of things.  Insensitivities, impatience.  (p.14)

But their visit to Borroloola with their first child brings new challenges for the author.  The conditions under which the community lives put her child at risk of sickness, yet there seems to be no way that she can reconcile the dilemma:

I feel torn, like I always do in Booroloola.  The poverty is stark, confronting.  The urge is to fix it, change it, stir things up.  Yet I worry that in this urge is my judgement of the reality of their lives.  That I am comparing the grind of their very survival with the privileged pleasures of my city-slick comforts.  I wonder if my way is really a better way.  Or am I ignoring without shame what I would never accept for myself. (p.15)

There were a couple of minor matters where I had some doubts about the reliability of the author’s reportage.  There was, for example, a young woman who died not long after a kidney transplant:

… but her family got her drinking again and she got sick.  But they didn’t know she was so sick.  No-one had told them she was so sick.  A shock.

I do find it hard to believe that anyone could go through a very serious procedure like a kidney transplant and the family not know just how serious it was. Particularly since kidney disease is rife in Aboriginal communities.

One of the aspects of traditional life that I would find very difficult to reconcile for myself is the very strict gender roles that the author describes.  Moriaty says that feminism is ‘unfathomable‘ at Borroloola where there is ‘deep respect’ and ‘a valued respective place in the world’.  Male knowledge and female knowledge are exclusive, and each must be guarded carefully under their Law.  I understand that this is an ancient cultural tradition that has the force of Law for Aboriginal people, but like most women of my generation I had to join the struggle for gender equality in the 1970s because there were all sorts of barriers in my education, my workplace, and even my social life.  I could not now willingly surrender the gains that have been made.  I refuse to be defined or pigeonholed because I am female, and I will not submit to being either limited in access or granted special rights on the grounds of my gender.   I won’t, for example, travel to places and spend my tourist dollars where I have to cover myself from head-to-foot because the state religion deems it necessary for women but not for men.  While I’m unlikely ever to be in a position similar to Ros Moriarty who was expected to trek out into the desert to perform ceremony in strict isolation from the menfolk, I have felt confronted by signs in an indigenous art exhibition in Melbourne which requested that women keep out.  I was equally confronted by limitations on women’s entry to temples in Indonesia, and while I cooperated with these requests out of my own choice to be courteous, I was privately angry about it.

One of the issues raised by Ros Moriarty’s book is the tragedy of indigenous knowledge dying out because it can only be passed on to initiated people – and initiation is gender-based too.  When young indigenous people of the next generation themselves are in some way not ready or willing to receive this information, it is lost, and lost forever.  Like many people of goodwill in this country, the author doesn’t really have a solution for this dilemma, and the preservation of indigenous languages is problematic too.

Listening to Country is a chastening book to read.  Although it’s not a substitute for reading the authentic stories of indigenous authors, I recommend it as a window into indigenous life in remote communities.

Author: Ros Moriaty
Title: Listening to Country, A Journey to the Heart of What It Means to Belong
Publisher: Allen and Unwin, 2010
ISBN: 9781742378152
Source: Personal library, purchased from Fishpond

Availability

Fishpond: Listening to Country


The Censor's LibraryLittle Man What NowIt’s odd how ideas from disparate kinds of reading can coalesce in the mind: I have been reading The Censor’s Library, Uncovering the Lost History of Australia’s Banned Books by Nicole Moore, and amongst other propositions that she puts is that the enthusiasm with which books were banned in Australia led to the modernism movement passing us by.   However it wasn’t just works by authors such as James Joyce which had too many naughty bits for the good people of Australia to read, it was all kinds of other books as well, including during the Great Depression, many realist and socialist books banned on the grounds of sedition.  The Grapes of Wrath was referred for censorship in 1939 but scraped in, while  Orwell’s Down and Out in Paris and London was banned in 1933.

Other realist and socialist novels of the 1930s with similar critiques of a degenerating society were also banned as obscene.  High cultural literary forms like the novel were compelled to seriously engage with life on the other side of the class divide during the 1930s, as the depression continued and socialist and Communist critique informed aesthetics across the world.  Australian censors strongly policed the access of working-class or ordinary readers to publications critical of existing economic and social orders, however.

(The Censor’s Library, Uncovering the Lost History of Australia’s Banned Books by Nicole Moore, UQP, 2012, p. 90)

Well, I haven’t finished reading Moore’s book yet, so I don’t know if  Hans Fallada’s Little Man, What Now? was banned, but if it wasn’t, it must have been an oversight on the part of our otherwise zealous authorities because it depicts the cruel downfall of a white-collar worker during the Great Depression in Germany.  Published in 1932 on the verge of Hitler’s ascendancy, and making allusions to both scapegoating the Jews and to Communism as a political alternative, the novel depicts the grinding poverty and the absence of a social safety net for ordinary Germans at the time.

Johannes ‘Sonny’ Pinneberg is a salesman who marries prematurely because his girlfriend Emma ‘Lämmchen’ Mörschel is pregnant, and is promptly sacked because he’s now not free to marry the boss’s unappealing daughter.  The newlyweds are both naïve and Lämmchen in particular thinks that love will conquer all, but life has some rude shocks in store for them…  Neither of them has much in the way of savings and apart from a few bits and pieces in Lämmchen’s ‘glory box’, they start out with nothing much but dreams, and the gold wedding rings never eventuate.

In times of very high unemployment it becomes a matter of ‘who you know’ so it is fortunate that Pinneberg’s mother has a new boyfriend.  She’s a rather dubious character, and Jachmann, her strangely cash-laden lover is even more dubious, but he wangles a job for Pinneberg as a menswear salesman.  But the pressure on Pinneberg is intense because he’s always under threat of retrenchment.  Management masks this as sacking the workers for minor infringements or failing to make a sales quota, but the reality is that there isn’t enough work for them to do because there aren’t enough  buyers during the Depression.

The search for somewhere affordable to live is a nightmare.  At various times they live with his mother and Jachmann; in an attic; and in a concealed illegal apartment at the top of a storage room, accessible only by a ladder perilous to ‘Lämmchen’ in the late stages of pregnancy and even more perilous for getting a baby up and down.  The rent they have to pay is always more than they can afford and their pitiful savings dwindle away to nothing, not helped by Pinneberg’s loving impulse to buy his Lämmchen the dressing table she wants.  They can’t afford to eat properly, exacerbated by the culinary disasters of a young inexperienced bride and a truly tragic scene where Lämmchen’s hunger gets the better of her and she doesn’t share the food she craves, despite the best of intentions.

Despite these harrowing scenes and the disastrous circumstances in which this couple find themselves at the end of the novel, Little Man What now? is not sentimental or overwrought.  There are comic moments and moments of joy, as when Pinneberg manages to find flowers to present to Lämmchen after the birth.  Fallada, who knew at first hand what it meant to be one of the underclass, writes with great empathy of the surprise discovery of the young father that babies can bawl for a very long time indeed.  Fallada also knows when to exercise restraint, as when it dawns on Pinneberg that it is his wife who is supporting him and not the other way round.  I’m sure I’m not the only reader who cheers when Pinneberg exerts his masculinity to insist that a well-off woman pay for the darning and hand over the 8 marks she owes!

The Myth of the Great DepressionThree DollarsBTW While I was scouring the web for references to Australian Depression era novels, I came across a 2009 broadcast called Literature During the Depression on Radio National (from the Good Old Days when they had a dedicated books and writing show).   The program was meant to explore whether the current GFC might trigger literary works like those of the Great Depression, but surprisingly it didn’t mention Three Dollars, Eliott Perman’s iconic 1998 story of the impact of economic downturn on an ordinary man.  Instead, it focussed more on American novels of the Depression such as The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck (1939) as does the  disappointing Wikipedia entry.  Still, it’s a broadcast worth listening to, not least because historian David Potts, author of The Myth of the Great Depression warns against literature being taken as social history at face value:

 … literature is heavily geared to show a lot of the worst moments of the worst off. …  there was concern with social issues and so it stresses those things where the greatest social injustice lies. … I’ve recorded in my book some instances where there’s a flow-on from one horrific example to another down the line of literature and history that can be seen to be somewhat exaggerated.

This comment did make me wonder whether Little Man What Now? was an exaggeration of conditions during the Great Depression in Germany, but even if it was it made me curious about Australian novels inspired by economic calamity. I dug out my ancient copy of Geoffrey Dutton’s The Literature of Australia  (Pelican 1976) to see what I might find about Depression era literature in Australia, but while there’s a very interesting survey of our writing in the 1920s and 30s, when an Australian tradition was emerging in the form of sagas, the picaresque and the documentary, Dutton doesn’t mention the Depression in Australia as a catalyst for literature.  In other contexts, he does refer to Christina Stead’s Seven Poor Men of Sydney (1934) as a novel which reveals its Australianness in ‘a strand of melancholy and pessimism’ (p. 203) which is most serendipitous because I bought a copy of this just yesterday at the Woodend Secondhand Bookshop!  He refers to Kylie Tennant’s The Battlers  (1941)  which I have read and reviewed and also The Pea-pickers (1942) which I have read but not reviewed here.  Recently released in the Angus & Robertson Australian Classics series,  both these novels were set in the 1930s and explore the travails of workers and the unemployed, but I can’t think of a Depression era Australian novel depicting urban life.

Still, I’m inclined to think that Fallada’s novel was universal in the issues it raises.  It’s an excellent book, what a wonderful author he was!  I have two more great books in the series released by Scribe and am looking forward to reading them too…

Tom at A Common Reader reviewed it too, commenting that

Fallada’s books give a fascinating glimpse of what life was like on the ground level while national leaders prepared for war.  Fallada’s books are immensely readable, and with both Little Man What Now and Alone in Berlin, I found myself speeding through them to find out what happened next.   I would highly recommend this book to anyone with an interest in Europe between the wars.  The excellent translation by Susan Bennett makes this a very readable novel with no hint that it was originally written in another language.

Author: Hans Fallada
Title: Little Man, What Now?
Translated from the German Kleiner Mann, Was Nun? by Susan Bennett
ISBN: 9781922070289
Source: Review copy courtesy of Scribe Publications

Availability:
Fishpond:Little Man, What Now?
Book Depository: Little Man What Now?
Or direct from Scribe Publications

Posted by: Lisa Hill | June 7, 2013

Elemental, by Amanda Curtin


Elemental (Curtin)As you know if you saw the Sensational Snippet that I posted about Amanda Curtin’s new novel Elemental, I loved this book.  Curtin is an author of exceptional talent and in this novel she tugs at the heartstrings without being maudlin, sentimental or twee.  This is one of those novels that is at once both tender and brutal so that the reader becomes emotionally bound to the world that has been so skilfully created, not wanting to stop reading and yet not wanting the book ever to end.

The central character Meggie Tulloch is a tough old lady who has lived through that cruellest of centuries, the 20th.   In her old age, something is bothering her so profoundly that she is setting down the story of her life for her grand-daughter, Laura, whom she calls ‘lambsie’.  Her memories are painful, and the reader feels the tension between the impulse to conceal and the will to reveal, a struggle that must be resolved in order for Meggie to explain herself and her family, for some reason that is not revealed until the end of the story.

She was born near the turn of the century in the north-east of Scotland when economics meant that unskilled labourers worked in atrocious conditions.  The men work hard, but the women’s lives are a misery.  A man comes home from the boats to a meal by the fire and a chance to rest a while, but the women’s burdens are Sisyphean.  They lug creels of fish for sale across the bitter landscape, and it is they who must wade into the freezing sea  – to hoist their menfolk into the boats so that their feet stay dry during the long hours at sea.  Girls take on responsibility early: cooking, cleaning, endlessly knitting with frozen fingers the clothes that protect the men from the harsh winds and water.   What education there is, finishes early, even for a bright girl like Meggie, because superstition and tradition rule, with each succeeding generation bound to the same hopeless existence.

But change does come, in the form of herring boats from the North Sea and industrial scale processing.  Like her sister Kitta, Meggie takes the opportunity to escape, though not without guilt at abandoning her mother.  But it’s a workplace to rival the horrors of the Chicago abattoirs in Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle.  Meggie works outdoors, in foul weather, gutting fish for hours on end and destroying her hands with the salt – and yet glad to have a job and be independent of her sadistic grandfather.  She falls in love but marries mainly to rescue her sister from the madhouses that were no help to the mentally ill at the turn of the century.  Both Meggie and her husband suffer work-related injuries and the skills they’ve learned are damaged along with their bodies.  So they emigrate, to Fremantle WA, but along comes The Great War, and then another, and both bring tragedy in different ways.

There’s a pattern slowly revealed, an impulse that seems to run through the generations, that Meggie is desperate to warn Laura about.

I’m not going to mess up the cunning structure of this novel by giving any hints about the Coda, which follows Water, Air and Earth, except to say that Meggie’s voice which narrates the first three parts is so strong and authentic that it’s a disorientating shock when the narration shifts.

In a world of plastics, processed food, synthetic environments and virtual communications, the world of Meggie Tulloch is raw and profoundly confronting.   It seems as if the author is challenging readers of the 21st century to consider how we might endure in a world grown soft with indulgence.  Meggie’s life is grim, but it is better than her mother’s, she thinks, and it has never soured her.  Indeed it pleases her that her granddaughter’s life is so benign that it seems shallow.  It is not until the Coda that Curtin shows with graphic realism that the 21st century can dish out a grim reality requiring courage and endurance too.

Destined for the shortlists, I am sure!

Author: Amanda Curtin
Title: Elemental
Publisher: UWAP (University of Western Australia Press), 2013
ISBN: 9781742585062
Source: Review copy courtesy of UWAP.

Availability

Fishpond: Elemental
Or direct from UWAP (where you can also read another extract, and there is a reading group guide).

Posted by: Lisa Hill | June 7, 2013

2013 Ernest Scott Prize for History shortlist


I love hearing about philanthropists who endow prizes in memory of someone they love.
The Ernest Scott Prize for History was founded by Emily Scott in memory of her husband Emeritus Professor Sir Ernest Scott Knight Bachelor. He was professor of History at the University was for 23 years, from 1913-1936.

Paraphrasing from the website at the University of Melbourne:

It seems that he must have been a remarkable, self-made man. An illegitimate child in the days when that was a stigma, he was brought up by his grandparents and although he didn’t complete higher education, he worked as a journalist for twenty years. He was a Fabian and a Theosophist, and he married the daughter of Annie Besant, a prominent activist for women’s rights. The couple migrated to Melbourne in 1892.

The prize commemorates his interest in the development of Australian historical studies. His books on Australian exploration history made Scott into a professional among amateurs and antiquarians. He inspired his students to do archival research and to ask critical questions of popular historical mythologies. A generation of young Australians learned about the country’s past from his notable Short History of Australia (1916).

Among the shortlisted books for the Ernest Scott Prize are two that I have reviewed.  My review of Tasmanian Aborigines: A History Since 1803 is among my top ten most visited posts, with 2,355 hits as of today’s date, and I think it is one of the most important histories published because it so comprehensively debunks the myths that have surrounded the history of Tasmanian Aborigines for most of the 20th century.

Thanks to the University of Melbourne (who administer the prize) for the information about Ernest Scott and to Bookseller and Publisher for their tweet about this shortlist.

Congratulations to all the authors and publishers.

Webs of Empire: Locating New Zealand's Colonial Pasts Larrikins: A History University Unlimited: The Monash Story The Lone Protestor: A M Fernando in Australia and Europe The Tasmanian Aborigines: A New History

Posted by: Lisa Hill | June 6, 2013

Americana, by Don DeLillo


AmericanaI’ve had mixed success with award-winning American author Don DeLillo.  I abandoned the first one I tried (The Body Artist) but I was very impressed by Falling Man (see my review) even though it’s a challenging book to read.  I picked up Americana (1971) when I stumbled on it at the library because I have just bought a copy of award-winning Nigerian Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Americanah from the Africa Book Club - and I wanted to see if she drew at all on DeLillo’s novel with a similar sounding name…

DeLillo’s Americana is his first novel, and it’s one of those subversion of the ‘American dream’ novels.  But it also subverts genre: in Part 1 it subverts the workplace satire, and in Part 2 the road novel genre.  DeLillo says himself that it’s a ‘shaggy’ novel - and it is, but it’s still interesting to read.

It begins with a portrait of office life which presents the intensely competitive male employees endlessly trying to analyse office politics to identify the real hierarchy which lies beneath the veneer of equality.  All things have significance in this hothouse: even the type and colour of office furniture and doors and other symbols which denote who’s who.  The men pump the secretaries for information about plots and counter-plots, and they all covertly watch each other at the drone-fests which achieve nothing at all.

The style of Part 1 is very familiar to 21st century readers but the sardonic wit still works.  Through his narcissistic narrator David Bell, DeLillo captures the irony of opinion-makers in a TV network themselves having no idea about the current affairs docos that they’re supposed to be producing.  David’s project about the Navaho Indians is predicated on breath-taking ignorance, and their stance on China shows that they are focussed only on the visuals and the logistics of producing it, not the content.

Their insular attitudes are inevitable given their obsessions.   Weede, for example, is a ‘master of the office arts, specialising in the tactic of reaction’  (p. 15).  David admires his decapitation of a rival,  a subordinate who over-decorates his office with his wife’s paintings.   Weede’s response is to remove all his pictures and replace them with one small detail from the Sistine Chapel.  ‘The almost bare walls were Rob Claven’s death sentence.  The Michelangelo was the dropping of the blade’.

Taste, impressions, being ‘cool’ is what matters to everyone else, so David disingenuously tells us, but not to him, because he’s an observer. He goes to parties only to count the people there, separate from the current girlfriend, talk to people and then reunite to talk about how awful it was.  He’s puerile, announcing his ‘child’s petty genius for reprisal’, to get the reaction from the reader that he deplores others for needing. The ‘observer’ is at all times a participant too, because he considers himself to be a victim of his own handsome good looks and his cleverness.

For to be neither handsome nor unattractive, neither ruthless nor clever, was to be considered a hero by the bland, a nice fellow by the brilliant and the handsome, a nonentity by the clever, a homosexual by the lunatic fringe of the unattractive, a bright young man by the ruthless, a threat by the dangerously neurotic, an intimate friend by the alienated and the doomed.  I did my best to keep low. (p. 13)

We learn about David’s imprudent marriage to Meredith, his affairs, the way he wastes his time at work, and his interest in Warburton, the ‘elder statesman’ of the network.  Nobody else pays any attention to Warburton’s mild attempts to raise standards because he ‘elevates issues to a cosmological level … making it easier to ignore them because they’re not fit to deal with moral questions’ (p. 63).

Inevitably David is too cool to stay in his job any longer so he sets off on a road trip with three companions, Brand, Pyke and a woman called Sullivan. His ‘project’ is to make a biographical film of his life, out in the ‘real’ America, but it’s a sacramental journey because they don’t know where they are even when they get there … and they hang around in one place for ages which subverts the whole idea of the road novel/movie.  Not only that, his frequent phone calls back to his secretary Binky show that he’s keeping his options open at all times, so he hasn’t really burned his bridges at the office and rejected the whole American Dream anyway.

Needless to say, David manages to star in his own voyeuristic movie wherever he goes, due in part to his flashy camera which ‘implies meaning where no meaning exists’.   In between bizarre episodes where he inveigles hapless locals into believing they are participating in something meaningful, there are stories from his past and his companions’ – but he finds their stories ‘boring’ (and he tells them so).

A couple of episodes unnerved me a bit.  Having read Tears in the Darkness (see my review) I didn’t find the Bataan Death March a topic for black humour, and the orgy at the end was beyond unpleasant.

But overall, this is an interesting book because of the way it plays with genre and uses a narrator whose immaturity should repel the reader, but doesn’t.

Author: Don DeLillo
Title: Americana
Publisher: Penguin, 2o11
ISBN: 9780241953389
Source: Cassey-Cardinia Library

Availability

Fishpond: Americana
Book Depository: Americana

BTW I highly recommend the Africa Book Club as a source for great new contemporary fiction from the continent.  If you sign up for their newsletters you get notice of special offers and competitions, and they feature interesting bios and articles about the great range of African titles.  And guess what? unlike most other online bookstores, if you contact them, a real live person called Daniel will contact you back!  Americanah is just one of the books I have bought from them …

Posted by: Lisa Hill | June 6, 2013

Sensational Snippets: Elemental, by Amanda Curtin


Elemental (Curtin)I discovered Amanda Curtin’s writing when I stumbled across The Sinkings at the library (see my review) and she immediately became one of those writers whose work I will always look out for. Her new novel, Elemental, is exquisite, so wonderful to read that I am hoarding the reading, spreading it out over as many days as possible because I like it so much.

Old Meggie Tulloch is writing her life story, to give to her grand-daughter, whom she calls ‘lambsie’. It is an astonishing story, from Roanhaven in the rugged north-east of Scotland at the turn of the 20th century, to Fremantle in WA.   Her voice is vivid, authentic and strong, but the excerpt below stopped me in my tracks: Amanda Curtin has captured not only the voice of this remarkable old woman, but also her gravest fear:

After what the doctors said, I didn’t think to be finishing what I’d started, but I am a tough one, aye, tougher than ever they thought. Well, they were not to know about the women of Roanhaven, were they? There is much yet to say, and it seems I am to be spared a while more to say it. But churning up the mud of the past, all the bones and stones buried there – is it fair? Some things are best left in the dark. So much sadness. I don’t know.
I will carry on for now, while I can.
 But I forget things, you know, lambsie. Kathryn is right: I do. Even more since all that business in hospital. If I tell you a thing once and then tell you again – well, you’ve just to put up with that.
 They are different, you know, memory and memories. Memory is the way you know it’s Tuesday or what you ate for dinner last night, or that you’ve already bought a new pair of slippers so whyever would you go to town and buy another pair? But memories are the things that make you who you are, even the ones you are most afraid to look square in the face. And the funny thing is, I am losing my memory but not my memories. If it was the other way round, you’d be getting a kist* full of knitting yarn and last Thursday’s shopping list, which I still canna find.
But will they remain, too, my memories? And will I remember how to write them? I am afraid that words I have loved all my life will be carried away from me like flotsam on the tide.
 I must write faster, while I still can, and I must choose, lambsie, choose for you. I canna write it all, I know that now. After I came home from hospital, I made myself this promise: if ever I am well enough to go back to my notebooks, I will not just begin the story from where I left off, what came next, and next after that. No, I will try to write for you the things that matter. And I will try to write them all.

Elemental, by Amanda Curtin, UWAP (University of Western Australia Press), 2013

* A kist is a wooden storage chest for linen.  My mother, who speaks Gaelic, always used this word to describe such chests, and I use it still.

Availability

Fishpond: Elemental
Or direct from UWAP (where you can also read another extract, and there is a reading group guide).

Posted by: Lisa Hill | June 5, 2013

2013 Kibble and Dobbie shortlists


The Kibble and Dobbie  awards have been celebrating the work of Australia’s women writers for 20 years, and they are among my favourite awards. I like them because they differentiate between established and debut authors, and because they were set up to honour a trail-blazing woman.  As the press release tells us:

The awards commemorate the trail-blazing Nita B. Kibble (1879-1962), the first female librarian at the State Library of New South Wales who was employed in 1899 after her signature was mistaken for a man’s when she applied for a junior position. Her niece, Nita May Dobbie (1904-1992), established the awards in her will to celebrate her aunt’s legacy and to support Australian women’s writing.

  • The Kibble Literary Award (currently valued at $30,000) recognises the work of an established Australian woman writer.
  • The Dobbie Literary Award (currently valued at $5,000) recognises a first published work from an Australian woman writer.

The 2013 shortlisted authors for the Kibble are:

The shortlisted authors for the Dobbie  are:

The winners will be announced on Wednesday, 24 July 2013.

Congratulations to all the authors and publishers:)

Posted by: Lisa Hill | June 4, 2013

Hmm, synchronicity …


The Landmark Herodotus: The HistoriesThis is one of the eeriest experiences of synchronicity that I’ve had.

I’ve been reading Bob Strassler’s  The Landmark Herodotus: The Histories for months now, idly scanning a few pages at a time in the evening while the news is on.  And lo! tonight as the 7.30 Report launched into yet another report about the present government’s impending electoral annihilation, which follows from their replacement of one leader with another because he was hard to get along with,  I read the following, written two-and-a-half thousand years ago …

After the Ionians had united their ships off Lade, they held assemblies at which I suppose other speakers addressed them, but one among them was certainly the Phocaean general Dionysios, who said, ‘Our welfare, Ionians, now balances on a razor’s edge, whether we shall be free men or slaves – runaway slaves, that is. So if you are willing to endure hardships in the present, you must set to work right now; only thus will you be able to prevail over your opponents and be free. On the other hand, if you remain feeble and undisciplined, I have every expectation that you will pay the penalty  …  So obey and entrust yourselves to me, and I promise you that as long as the gods grant equal treatment to both sides, our enemies will either not join battle with us at all, or if they do, they will suffer a decisive defeat.

Upon hearing this speech, the Ionians committed themselves to Dionysios.  And every time he led out their ships, he had them form up in column formation.  And when he trained the rowers, he had them practise the breakthrough manoeuvre of sailing through a line of the enemy’s ships, and he armed the marines who fought from the deck.  Then for the remainder of the day he would keep the ships at anchor, but he gave the Ionians work to do all day long.  For seven days they followed him and obeyed his orders, but on the eighth, the Ionians, since they were unaccustomed to such hard labour and were worn out both by their exertions and the sun, spoke to one another as follows: ‘What divine power have we offended, that we must suffer in this way?  We have lost our wits and have sailed away from our senses in committing ourselves to this Phocaean braggart.  He provides only three ships, and yet we entrust ourselves to his command!  And after he enlisted us, he has insulted us and injured us so severely that we will never recover; many of us have fallen ill, and many more are likely to do so as well.  We would be better off suffering anything rather than these evils; even to endure further slavery, whatever that may be like, would be better than to continue as we are at present. Come on, then, let’s not follow his orders any longer.’

Herodotus, The Histories, Book Six, 6.11-12, translated by Andrea L. Purvis,  in The Landmark Herodotus: The Histories Ed. Robert Strassler, Quercus Books, London, 2008, p 430-1

 They were annihilated, of course.

Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose …

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