Posted by: Lisa Hill | April 26, 2024

2024 Sorrento Writers Festival (26/4/24)

Greetings from Sorrento, where I have had a lovely day listening to some very interesting sessions!

This has to be quick, we are booked in for an early dinner at The Baths, and I am starving because there was no time for lunch… so these are just quick summaries, sorry!

(I will fix up misspellings of authors names or those whose names I didn’t catch… later. And I will add in the names of the authors’ books too. )


First up, I went to the second of three sessions on Modernism.  (I missed the first one which was yesterday.)  This one was about how modernism changed architecture, and the speakers were Fiona Austin of Beaumaris Modern Fame; Leonie Gruber and Patricia Callen.

Modernism, as we know, is a movement that began in Europe in the early C20th century, most notably by the Bauhaus in 1919, and is became influential in a very short time but Australia was late to the party for various reasons and nothing very exciting happened in architecture here until the postwar era.  That is when we began to see the whole point of architecture, which is to make life better.

Domestic housing is made better by having light-filled spaces, by building the house to the orientation of the sun, by the use of local materials, by integrating the outside with interior spaces, by designing free-flowing spaces and by the use of colour.  The speakers were adamant that making houses bigger does not make them better, and nor does the current fad for beige, beige and more beige because people always have an eye on resale value now.

There were slides of some lovely modernist houses, especially in Beaumaris which is where in the postwar period artists and architects formed a mecca for creativity.  The houses were modest because there was a shortage of materials and tradesmen, but they worked well, and today, updated with modern appliances etc, they still do.

Modernist houses, they said, were great for women, because kitchens were no longer isolated from the rest of the house.   (LH: Of course, it’s even better if she gets out of the kitchen because others are sharing the cooking but that was a topic for another day.)

Not all modernist houses can be preserved with heritage listings, but if more people valued them, they would get updated instead of building some horrible monstrosity instead.  (They didn’t use the word monstrosity, that’s my word.)


My next session was Modernism #3, which I enjoyed even more because it was about modernist art in Australia.  The speakers were Rodney James, whose book Letters to a Critic I reviewed here, Lesley Hardy and Kendall Morgan. The panel chair Charlotte Guest led off with Rodney James talking about the art critic Alan McCulloch, which was an excellent launching pad for talking about the famous Herald Art Show in 1939 which brought all kinds of wonderful modernist art to Australians who’d never seen it before.  The whole collection got stranded here because of the war, and so the artworks were offered for sale, but *deep sigh* the stuffy old NGV passed up the opportunity to buy a Picasso and what they did buy was not very exciting.

From there the talk (with accompanying slide show) moved on to Arthur Boyd and Albert Tucker, John and Sunday Reed , Mirka Mora and Joy Hester.  It also segued to our famous Angry Penguins Literary Hoax which made a stunning appearance in Stephen Orr’s Sincerely, Ethel Malley (see my review) – a good scandal is always fun at a festival.


Next up was The Legacy of Holocaust Literature, and the speakers were Leah Kaminsky, Michael Gawenda and Rachel Unreich.

The first question was why?  Why is there still such huge interest in the histories, memoirs, testimonies, novels, poetry, documentaries and films by and about survivors and the generation that came after them?

Michael Gawenda noted that at first there was a great silence followed by an outpouring in the 1960s and 70s.   That writing, he said, took place because it was part of the European tradition of literature, and because Jews were central to European civilisation.  OTOH There isn’t much about the Armenian genocide because it was not in their tradition to write about it and also there isn’t much in the way of documentary evidence in the way that there is for the Holocaust.

(LH: He didn’t say that acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide has been suppressed by the Turkish government for decades and that it famously tried to prosecute the Nobel Prize winning author Orhan Pamuk for raising the issue.   I’ve read a couple of recent novels that tell this important story, both of them by Australians.  I’ll add the links to these later.)

Leah Kaminsky talked about her most recent book Doll’s Eye (see my review) which explores the role of doctors and medical scientists during the years of Hitler’s rise to power.  Their research was garbage, but it became influential because it wasn’t challenged.  She also talked about her previous book The Hollow Bones, which was about her mother who committed suicide when Kaminsky was 21.

By contrast, Rachel Unreich’s book was about how her mother, who had experienced unspeakable horrors, had somehow managed to have a ‘joyful’ life in spite of it.  She was an exception, said Gawenda because for survivors there never was a happy ending.

Which is where the current crop of commercial Holocaust fiction is so wrong.  Gawenda says that he was not traumatised by the DP camp he was born in, but books which romanticise the Holocaust are appalling, exploitative, cynical and untrue. Redemption stories are a lie.  People were scarred and horribly traumatised, even if they masked their feelings for their children’s sake.

It was a sobering session.


Next up was Charlotte Wood in conversation with Ramona Koval and it was the highlight of my day.  She talked about the genesis of Stone Yard Devotional (See my review) which coincided with traumatising events in her personal life, and Covid.

She talked about the appeal of ‘deep silence’ and how she’s valued a couple of writing retreats she’s done, because it’s a way of getting away from an overwhelming life.  We’re not made to absorb the violence and catastrophe that comes from the media because we can’t do anything about it, and it’s everywhere.  But the ethical question raised by the book is: when is it ok to withdraw? Though the novel doesn’t really resolve this, it shows that the narrator’s life has all been action, which has achieved nothing, and she comes to realise that the nuns, ‘doing nothing’ except praying is actually doing no harm because they are not endlessly consuming.

Amongst other interesting things in a very interesting session was the idea that a writer must please the reader, but must also please herself.  Sometimes that means leaving things open-ended.

They concluded with a droll commentary about how much contemporary publishing is about people emoting instead of thinking.  Amen to that!


My last session was political: John Faine with Greg Sheridan and Sam Roggaveen about Australia’s place in the world.  The consensus was that AUKUS is a waste of money, and that China might/might not be as scary as we’re being led to think, but I was too tired to take notes and don’t want to misquote anybody.

More tomorrow!

The titular Brief Notes on the Art and Manner of Arranging One’s Books is one of nine short pieces in a Perec collection in the Penguin Books Great Ideas series. There are 94 titles altogether:  I’ve previously read The Narrative of Trajan’s Column (2020), by Italo Calvino, translated by Martin McLaughlin (see my review); on the TBR I also have Reflections on the Guillotine by Albert Camus, translated by Justin O’Brien.

It is accurate to call this collection ‘brief notes’ because they mostly are, though the first one ‘Robert Antelme or the Truth of Literature’ is more of an essay… a meditation on the literature of the camps after the Holocaust.  It was written in 1962, when Perec was not to know that what he thought was a flood of testimonies represented survivors’ irresistible urge to write:

For the returning deportee, to speak, to write, is a need as strong and immediate as is his need for calcium, for sugar, for sunlight, meat, sleep and silence.  It’s not the case that he can remain silent and forget.  He has first of all to remember.  he has to explain, to tell, to dominate that world whose victim he was. (p.3)

As we now know, this was nonsense, and for many survivors,  a reluctance to give testimony persisted well into old age.  But still, this is a very interesting essay exploring the work of Robert Antelme, (1917-1990) who had married Marguerite Duras in 1939 and was deported to  Buchenwald, and then Gandersheim because of his activities with the French Resistance.  Perec’s essay led me to these thoughts at the Washington Post about Antelme’s 1947 The Human Race book when it was finally translated into English in 1992.  Which made me wonder not for the first time about how tardy we are in the English-speaking world about translating important books.

Anyway…


It’s always nice to enjoy a bit of frivolity after reading sobering books, and like any bibliophile, I enjoyed Brief Notes on the Art and Manner of Arranging One’s Books.  I can never resist those articles that crop up online about how books can be arranged.

Perec tells us about a friend who had the notion to maintain his home library at 361 books, meaning that he could not buy another book until he had disposed of one to make space for it.  Like all of us pretending to be in control of the TBR, he soon found ways to subvert himself.  For example, a book could count as one book even if it contained more than one novel.  So Nothing, Doting Blindness by Henry Green counts as one book, of course! The rule is ‘adjusted’ to mean 361 authors…

But that needs to be ‘adjusted’ too, on account of those pesky books that have no author — chivalric romances or the Dadaists who can’t be separated without automatically losing 80 to 90 percent of what made them interesting. So far, adjusting the rule to mean 361 subjects, Perec tells us, is working out ok so far.

Hah!

There are two main problems when one has books: they are a problem of space, and a problem of order…

Books are not dispersed but assembled.  Just as we put all the pots of jam into a jam cupboard, so we put all our books in the same place, or into several same places.  (p.63)

Indeed. My ‘several’ same places are: my library, the sitting-room, the bedrooms (2); The Spouse’s office, and the family room. We conform to what Perec says about how you can only put cookery books in the room you cook in, (though truth be told, they are facing the other way into the family room).

 

As an aside, Perec lists ‘things which aren’t books but are often met with in libraries’, and yes I have some items from his list: photos, a pen and ink drawing by children’s author Ann James, and a dried flower thingy (a relic from a mother’s day stall). I also have some bookish memorabilia including Don Quixote from Spain, and Arcimboldo from the Netherlands. Plus little busts of Shakespeare and Dickens; Plato and Socrates have moved down to the Philosophy shelves in the family room.  Not in Perec’s list since he wrote it in 1978 is my computer and peripherals.

Nor does he mention the importance of A View.  I look out of my window at a rampant white jasmine, where finches, pigeons and the occasional parrot frolic and/or build their nests.  For advice on achieving a suitable bookspace + view, you can’t do better than visit Marina Sofia’s blog where bookshelves feature regularly in her Friday Fun series.

Next, Perec attends to the business of Order.

A library that is not arranged becomes disarranged. […]
Disorder in a library is not serious in itself; it ranks with ‘Which drawer did I put my socks in?’ We always think we shall know instinctively where we have put such and such a book.  And even if we don’t know, it will never be difficult to go rapidly along all the shelves. (p.65-6)

Hmm.  Maybe not as easy as he thinks if the books are double shelved…

Opposed to this apologia for a sympathetic disorder is the small-minded temptation towards an individual bureaucracy: one thing for each place and each place for one thing, and vice versa. Between these two tensions, one which sets a premium on letting things be, on a good-natured anarchy, the other that exalts the virtues of a tabula rasa, the cold efficiency of the great arranging, one always ends by trying to set one’s books in order. (p.66)

Oh yes…

Now, here is Perec’s list of ways of arranging books:

ordered alphaetically
ordered by continent or country
ordered by colour
ordered by date of acquisition
ordered by date of publication
ordered by format
ordered by genre
ordered by major periods of literary history
ordered by language
ordered by priority for future reading
ordering by binding
ordered by series.

NB Stable classifications are those which, in principle, you continue to respect; provisional classifications are those supposed to last only a few days, the time it takes for a book to discover, or rediscover, its definitive place. 

Over to you, dear reader.  How do you arrange your shelves?


PS I am off to the Sorrento LitFest this weekend.  I have ambitions to blog the sessions I attend but if internet access is unreliable, or I have too many martinis at dinner, please chat amongst yourselves until I get back.

Author: Georges Perec
Title: Brief Notes on the Art and Manner of Arranging One’s Books
Translated by John Sturrock
Publisher: Penguin Great Ideas series, Penguin Random House, 2020
Cover artwork by David Pearson
ISBN: 9780241475218, pbk., 96 pages
Source: Personal library, purchased from Readings $19.99

 

Historian and biographer Ross McMullen, won the Prime Minister’s Literary Award in 2013, for this multi-biography Farewell, Dear People, Biographies of Australia’s Lost Generation.  It’s a book I chose to dip into, for a commemorative post on Anzac Day.

For Australia, a new nation with a relatively small population, the death of 60,000 soldiers during World War I was catastrophic. It is hardly surprising, then, that Australians evaluating the consequences of the conflict have tended to focus primarily on the numbing number of losses ― on the sheer quantity of all those countrymen who did not return.

That there must have been extraordinary individuals among them has been implicitly understood, but these special Australians are unknown today. This book seeks to retrieve their stories and to fill the gaps in our collective memory. Farewell, Dear People contains ten extended biographies of young men who exemplified Australia’s gifted lost generation of World War I.

This is a book that celebrates achievements that took place before the war that claimed these men’s lives. Their stories tell us that we should let not let the manner of their deaths overshadow the lives they led beforehand.

These names will not be known to most people, but I list them here from the Table of Contents:

  • Geoff McCrea: the creative allrounder
  • Tom Elliott: Australia’s Kitchener
  • George Challis: the footballer
  • Ted Larkin: the administrator/politician
  • Clunes Mathison: the medical scientist
  • Robert Bage: the engineer/explorer
  • Gresley Harper, Winifred Harper and Phipps Turnbull: the barrister, the farmer, and the Rhodes scholar
  • Carew Reynell: the winemaker.

Robert Bage, photographed by Frank Hurley.

Robert Bage’s name is in Bold, because it is his story that I chose to read first.

Readers with good memories may remember my fascination with the Heroic Age of Exploration and my review of Douglas Mawson’s 1915 The Home of the Blizzard. Bage (1888-1915) was the astronomer at the Main Base during the Australasian Antarctic Expedition.


In some ways, Robert Bage led a life of privilege, but his father died when he was only three, and his paternal grandparents died shortly afterwards.  However his Uncle Charles Lange was a doctor with good connections both social and professional, and so Robert was able to attend Melbourne Grammar where his father and uncles had all been educated. He was an excellent student, winning prizes and matriculating at the age of only 14.  However, he stayed on to prepare further for university with study in the sciences, achieving honours in physics and chemistry, algebra and geometry.

While Bage’s friends had prominent and successful fathers, he did not.  Ted Bage had been prominent and successful many years earlier, but he had been absent for practically all his son’s life.  Bob was accustomed to this state of affairs, and it did not hold him back.  He and his sisters exuded capable, practical self-reliance. (p.329)

A scholarship enabled him to enter Trinity college and study engineering. He was active in university sports and with friends he went adventuring, hiking in the hills around Melbourne.  He travelled further afield in outback South Australia, and between terms, to Canada as a supernumerary engineer on the Moana.

After graduation he took up work with Victoria’s State Rivers and Water Supply, and then with the Queensland Railways.  It was there that he volunteered for the militia and came under the influence of Kitchener of imperial fame.  Bage decided to join the army as an engineer, taking leave of absence to join the explorer Douglas Mawson (1882-1958) on the Antarctic expedition that made his name.  

McMullen recounts the ins and outs of Bage’s activities on the expedition, described in 1928 as the greatest and most consummate expedition that ever sailed for Antarctica.  

Some 20,000 miles of coast had been explored for the first time.  The expedition had accomplished significant research advances in geology, cartography, meteorology, biology, magnetism and oceanography.  Radio communication in Antarctica was successfully pioneered. (p.372)

The exalted position among other Antarctic expeditions’ was in part because of the southern sledging party led by Bage.

They ‘accomplished even more than I had anticipated’, Mawson acknowledged.  It was one of the most arduous trips undertaken by any sledging party,’ wrote Charles Laseron; it was ‘a tribute to their endurance and determination that they pulled through at all.’ Bage, Webb, and Hurley still retain the record for distance covered in a day’s sledge-hauling, and it is inconceivable that it will ever be broken. (p.373)

But as those of us who have read The Home of the Blizzard know, some of these accomplishments were overshadowed by the tragic loss of Mertz and Ninnis and Mawson’s heroic struggle back to base alone. McMullen shows how these events impacted on Bage and other members of the team.  When Mawson had not returned by the time their supply ship had to depart before the ice froze over, a rescue team had to stay and overwinter for a second year.

For the half-dozen named, though, this was a dismal prospect.  They had been anticipating with relish their imminent return after a year of isolation in this windy wilderness.  Moreover, staying a further year had other consequences.  Bage was concerned that it would cost him his military seniority; Madigan was concerned that it would cost him his Rhodes scholarship.  But they accepted that some expeditioners had to stay.  Mawson was now a week overdue.  It was increasingly likely that a serious mishap had befallen his party: ‘we are all extremely anxious about him,’ Bage wrote. (p.364)

They had a bleak and dreary time during this second year, but they did their duty… arriving back in Australia 1914 to great acclaim and a round of after-dinner speaking engagements.  McCullen notes that after living cooped up in a hut in an all-male environment, half the expeditioners married soon after their return.  Bage became engaged to Dorothy Scantlebury* shortly after the outbreak of war in September, but since he was a member of the regular army, he was subject to immediate mobilisation and his company left for Egypt later that same month.

In May, he was killed at Gallipoli.

As McMullen says in the Introduction, these premature deaths represented a significant post-war loss for their nation because of their outstanding pre-war accomplishment or their outstanding character or both.  His purpose in resurrecting the stories of the men in this book is not to eulogise their deaths as mattering more than any others, but to show that amongst the thousands who died, there were exceptional men whose rare potential should not be forgotten. 


*Dorothy came from a notable Cheltenham family in the bayside suburb of Melbourne.  In 1919, Dorothy was teaching at Clyde school Mt Macedon, and went on to become Principal of Toorak College in 1942 ‐ the Scantlebury girls ‘old school’. (See Cheltenham’s Scantlebury Family 1889-1923)

Image credit: Robert Bage by Frank Hurley – State Library of New South Wales, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=14751010Australasian Antarctic Expedition: 

Author: Ross McMullen
Title: Farewell, Dear People, Biographies of Australia’s Lost Generation
Publisher: Scribe Publishing, 2012
Cover design: “by Scribe”
ISBN: 9781921844669, pbk., 600 pages, including Maps, a Bibliography, Notes Acknowledgements and an Index. The text runs to 531 pages.
Source: Personal library, purchased from Readers’ Feast, $45.00

 

Posted by: Lisa Hill | April 23, 2024

2024 The Age Book of the Year shortlist

The Age Book of the Year shortlists have been announced.

The judges for the fiction prize were bookseller Mark Rubbo and writer and publisher Louise Swinn.  The shortlisted titles are:

Women & Children, by Tony Birch, on my TBR
Anniversary, by Stephanie Bishop
One Day We’re All Going to Die, by Elise Hearst, see my review
The Idealist, by Nicholas Jose, see my review
Stone Yard Devotional, by Charlotte Wood, see my review
But the Girl, by Jessica Zhan Mei Yu


 

The books on the non-fiction shortlist, judged by writer Simon Caterson and historian Joy Damousi, include histories, memoirs and essays.

Bennelong & Phillip: A History Unravelled, by Kate Fullagar
Home Work: Essays on Love and Housekeeping, by Helen Hayward
Frank Moorhouse: Strange Paths, by Matthew Lamb (I’m currently reading, it’s excellent.)
Life So Full of Promise: Further Biographies of Australia’s Lost Generation, by Ross McMullin (I’m currently reading the predecessor of this one, Farewell Dear People.  Review coming soon.)
Personal Score by Ellen van Neerven
A Brilliant Life, by Rachelle Unreich.

The winners will be announced on May 8.


Last year’s winners were Limberlost by Robbie Arnott, and Wandering with Intent by Kim Mahood.  Both were great books, see my reviews here and here.

Posted by: Lisa Hill | April 22, 2024

The Postcard, by Anne Berest, translated by Tina Kover

The Postcard was a finalist for the Goncourt Prize, and a bestseller in France. And that’s interesting, because everybody’s favourite tourist destination doesn’t come out of it very well in this story that is a mystery, a portrait of Parisian intellectual and artistic life in the 20th century, and a devastating portrayal of how antisemitism still lingers in the France which deported so many French Jews to their deaths in Germany.

But first, the cover image.  I was still reading the first of four parts in this book when it occurred to me to look for the source of the arresting portrait on the cover.  It’s not a cleverly chosen stock image, it’s an authentic photo of Noémie Rabinovitch in 1941. Born in 1923 in Latvia, she was the younger sister of Anne Berest’s grandmother, Myriam.  She wanted to be a writer.

And while we should never make the mistake of mourning the loss of attractive people in the Holocaust more than those who are less appealing to look at, the intelligence and vitality of that young woman is a reminder that the Holocaust was a loss to humanity.  The world lost scientists, artists, musicians, inventors and writers, as well as ‘ordinary’ people who deserved to live just as much as anyone else.  What might that young woman have done with her life had she lived?

She might have written a magnificent book like this one.

The prologue begins with the postcard in the narrator’s mother’s ‘archive’.  Anne tells the story of Lélia receiving it in 2003, when she was twenty-four:

What caught my mother’s attention right away was the handwriting, strange and awkward, like no handwriting she had ever seen before.  Then she read the four names, written in the form of a list.

Ephraim
Emma
Noémie
Jacques (p.12)

And that was all, nothing else, except the stamp and the address.

The family knows who these people are.  They were Léila’s maternal grandparents and her aunt and uncle.  They were all deported from France and had died in Auschwitz in 1942, more than sixty years ago.

My mother felt a jolt of fear, as if someone were threatening her, someone lurking in the darkness of the past. Her hands began to tremble. (p.12)

Now, years later after an antisemitic incident at her daughter’s school, the narrator, Anne — a secular Jew — embarks on a quest to find out who sent this enigmatic postcard.  It seems impossible, but the book tells an intriguing tale of leads and red herrings drawn from her mother’s recollections and rambling stories.  A private detective helps, and so does a graphologist, both of them somewhat overwhelmed by the task because they usually work with pettier quests.  People who knew these four people are dead now, but descendants of those who knew the sole surviving sibling Myriam, sometimes know a scrap of information, leading to stories of flight, of the French Resistance, and of venal complicity.

I wanted to stop reading at the end of Part 1 ‘Promised Lands’.  Through Léila’s memories, I had come to know Ephraim, Emma, Noémie and Jacques, and when their lives came to an end about half way through the book, I was devastated. Berest had brought these people back to life in an extraordinary way; I was invested in them even though I knew their fate. But the rest of the story is just as rivetting. And Berest does not flinch from revealing the French betrayal of its Jewish citizens under the Vichy government.

The rest of the book recounts the quest and why it matters.  Berest depicts the awkwardness that is encountered when people know something but won’t tell.  There is still shame, and guilt, and people still have in their possession items that belong to descendants of those betrayed.  A scene when Léila ‘steals’ some photos from a man who lived in her parents’ village, is ironic. Anne remonstrates, and Léila retorts by saying that he can’t complain, he’s still got the beautiful old piano that Emma used to play.

The  postwar chaos when Myriam waits anxiously in Paris for her family’s return is very poignant.  Since she’s had no news, her assumption is that they are alive somewhere.  At this stage of human history, not everything is known.  So — day after day — she goes to the hotel hastily converted into a reception centre for people returning from the camps. She vacillates between hope, denial and despair, and refuses to take the advice to stay home and listen to the radio announcing the names.  This cruel, impersonal way of telling people about the fate of their loved ones seems incomprehensible today, but all over Europe authorities were overwhelmed by what had happened.  There was no plan.  And in some places, it was a problem that authorities did not want to confront.  They wanted these problem survivors gone; they wanted to move on.  They certainly did not want to interrogate the past.

The book is also a meditation on what it means to be Jewish when not observant at all… It’s an identity that cannot be shaken off, and it shapes a life, even for secular Jews. Because she doesn’t announce her Jewish heritage, Anne is sometimes taken for a Jew and sometimes not, and these assumptions lead to droll scenes when Anne is out of place and ignorant of the rituals to follow at services — both Jewish and Christian.  Her mother reminds her about the rules for using cutlery, but Anne doesn’t know the words or the songs and pronounces Amen/Oy-men incorrectly and so on.  (Having been to Anglican, Catholic, Jewish and secular funerals and marriages, I can relate to this embarrassment and confusion!)

The Postcard explores the emotions of the past and present and the repercussions which filter down to the present day, including the tension between those who want healing from acknowledging the past, and those who are afraid, for all sorts of reasons, of digging it up.  The ending, which reveals that they did indeed find out who sent the postcard and why, shows that it came from a very human impulse, and wasn’t malevolent at all.

The book is a work of autofiction, with names changed to protect the guilty.  The author did not want to shame the descendants of those who betrayed her family, her community, the Resistance and her country.  And no, the postcard is not an authorial invention; it really was sent to the author’s mother.

Author: Anne Berest
Title: The Postcard (La carte postale)
Translated from the French by Tina Kover
Cover design by Ginevra Rapisardi
Publisher: Europa Editions, 2023, first published 2021
ISBN: 9781609458386, pbk, 464 pages
Source: Kingston Library

If you read my previous review of Donna Coates’ Shooting Blanks at the Anzac Legend, Australian Women’s War Fictions you will know that I had only read Part 1, about women’s war fiction about WW1, and found it very interesting indeed.  Coates’ thesis is, from the blurb at AmazonAU:

War is traditionally considered a male experience. By extension, the genre of war literature is a male-dominated field, and the tale of the battlefield remains the privileged (and only canonised) war story.

In Australia, although women have written extensively about their wartime experiences, their voices have been distinctively silenced. Shooting Blanks at the Anzac Legend calls for a re-definition of war literature to include the numerous voices of women writers, and further recommends a re-reading of Australian national literatures, with women’s war writing foregrounded, to break the hold of a male-dominated literary tradition and pass on a vital, but unexplored, women’s tradition.


So, to Part 2 of Shooting with Blanks at the Anzac Legend.

The focus in Part 2 is not so much on women writers adopting the valorisation of the Anzacs, but on whether women wrote about women’s experience of WW2.

Chapter 7 ‘Damn(ed) Yankees, The Pacific’s Not Pacific Anymore’ covers fiction about American servicemen in Australia.  The novels discussed explore the tension between the contribution of the Americans and the interpersonal conflicts that arose when they were stationed in Australia, though Coates begins by noting that until recently, historians and literary critics had paid little attention to the one million American servicemen in Australia from 1941-1945.  This research includes…

…accounts of the tensions over fighting prowess, money and women, which heated up shortly after the Americans arrived, but their efforts to determine the impact the Americans had on Australian culture and way of life proved remarkably elusive. (p.186)

Coates analyses two novels that traverse this terrain.  One, I’d never heard of : Henrietta Drake-Brockman’s The Fatal Days (1947) and the other that I’d read in the years before blogging: Come in Spinner (1951) by Dymphna Cusack and Florence James.

Because Drake-Brockman’s and Cusack/James’ novels take place during different periods – The Fatal Days covers 20 February to 6 March, 1942; Come in Spinner eight days in October 1944 – they offer a fascinating overview of the American presence in Australia. The Fatal Days opens at a time when Australians are feeling especially vulnerable: the newspapers have begun to list Australian casualties in the Mediterranean; Singapore has fallen; the Japanese have bombed Darwin, raided Port Moresby and captured Rabaul. Suddenly, the Australians comprehend that their show of British loyalty – they have shipped both their arms and their armies to the other side of the equator – has rendered them defenceless in the face of enemy attack. Realising that they can no longer count upon Britain (now fully occupied fighting for her own survival) to protect them, they are enormously relieved when the Americans agree to come to their aid. (pp. 188-189).

Overall, The Fatal Days reads more like a series of essays championing the events and players at the Eureka Stockade and Anzac Cove than it does a work of fiction. Most frustrating is that Drake-Brockman’s female characters crow about identity-forming events that absent(ed) women, glory in a political adventure: disseminating values she did not help formulate, Drake-Brockman facilitates her own marginalisation as a woman writer. She also reinforces traditional perceptions that women’s experiences are unworthy material for a national literature and hence bolsters the power of the patriarchal culture that denounces women as “Other.”
(p. 192).

Come In Spinner comes in for some harsh criticism as well:

Cusack/James were ultimately cowards in their own war effort for, like the dutiful women myrmidons in World War I who relegated their female characters to the bush, they, too, were taking their orders from the masculine bush myth-makers such as Henry Lawson, C.E.W. Bean, and C.J. Dennis. (p. 201).

Oh.  So, these women writers have failed the Sisterhood too…

Chapter 8 ‘Where have all the flowers gone?’ offered some interesting observations about the symbolism of flowers used by Dymphna Cusack and Florence James in Come in Spinner to validate bush values but also to critique wartime institutions. [LH: Predating some of the 1970s hostility to the RSL and its political activities], Come In Spinner expresses a returned serviceman’s anger at the sight of poppies because he thinks that the RSL encourages a boozy complacency that precludes interrogation of war profiteering.

Come in Spinner also shows that were clear class differences in the affordability of flowers, and some of the working-class women often wore flowers that were bruised or damaged.  These flowers symbolise that the women were ‘damaged goods’, because they were forced into prostitution by poor wages in the city, reinforcing the vulnerability of women in wartime.

In referring to the sailor’s brutal de-flowering of a naïve sixteen-year-old, Cusack/James highlight one of the recurring criticisms of the Americans in Sydney – their desire for very young women.

Cusack/James are also critical of the double standards that prevail in wartime: when the authorities raid the house of ill repute where Monnie is held captive, they arrest her on the charge of promiscuity, but allow the licentious soldier to go unpunished.

Moreover, they stress that the conscription process was inequitable: although the policy insisted that women who were not gainfully employed were to be recruited into essential employment, in practice, as Anne Summers points out, “the single girls most likely to be conscripted were those poor or working-class girls who did not have fathers with the connections to get them an exemption. For the daughters of such influential men, the war years consisted of a whirl of parties with officers, then perhaps a few hours a week helping out at the Red Cross”.  Accordingly, in the novel, the Manpower completely overlooks upper-class women’s frivolity, never once admonishing them for failing to pull their weight. (pp. 211-212).

But once again Coates is disappointed by the way the novel privileges bush life, marriage and children as desirable.  These elements had to be updated for contemporary audiences when Come in Spinner was made into an ABC mini series in the 1980s, while still perpetuating the women’s need for help and guidance.

OTOH Coates, though she thinks that the mini-series did it better, agrees with literary critic Ina Bertrand’s view that “the novel depicts explicitly not only the financial and moral dilemmas of working people during wartime, but also the corruption rife in Sydney at the time, pointing out how the wealthy manage to maintain their lifestyle with few sacrifices while the majority of the community carry sometimes intolerable burdens”.  (p.226)

Chapter 9: ‘Country Matters in The Little (Southern Steel) Company’ begins by addressing the question of appropriation in Eleanor Dark’s The Little Company (1945, see my review) and M. Barnard Eldershaw’s Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow (1947, see my review), going on to suggest that Dymphna Cusack’s Southern Steel (1953, on my TBR) has too many similarities to be entirely coincidental.

Admittedly, given the texts’ shared historical time frames, some comparisons might be obvious. Dark’s novel takes place between 1941 and 1942, Cusack’s solely in 1942, with the bombing of Darwin figuring prominently in each. Both texts also document, to a greater or lesser extent, the “Yank invasion” of Australia and the advent of wartime measures such as blackouts, brown-outs, food shortages and rationing. The texts also depict women knitting khaki socks, serving enlisted men at canteens, and making their entry into war work – the munitions industry in Southern Steel and the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC) in The Little Company. Characters in both texts also express surprise that Australia – especially Newcastle, with its massive steelworks on the coast producing munitions – should suddenly have become so vulnerable, so threatened by an enemy that had, until 1942, seemed so remote. Nevertheless, both novels attest to the kind of complacency that prevailed among Australians, including members of the military… (pp. 230-231).

However, I found it hard to follow Coates’ train of thought in this chapter.  I am puzzled that there is no analysis of Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow because it is a work of women’s war fiction, actually written during WW2. And in its own way, it’s a repudiation of the mythic Anzac hero, because amongst other things it’s a critique of militarism.

Anyway…

Acknowledging that the other two novels are concerned with class, the text then goes off at a tangent to explore Cusack’s autobiography and the frustrations of the English-orientated curriculum and the lack of interest in Australian fiction at universities.   The analysis of Southern Steel suggests that in much of the novel, the war is only a backdrop.   Dark’s novel is analysed in terms of its exploration of Australian identity, for which WW2 was a catalyst, and (disagreeing with Drusilla Modjeska’s introduction), Coates finds it unsatisfactory too because Dark…

… had insisted publicly that we have “to find ways for women to participate in making decisions about the community and the nation, not just the family and the house” (233), yet she offered no policies or platforms or ideas of how to achieve this goal in her novel. (pp. 247-248).

The chapter concludes with a little rant about the rise and fall of OzLit in universities.

Chapter 10: ‘Reality Bites The Impact of World War II on the Australian Home Front in Maria Gardner’s Blood Stained Wattle (1992) and Robin Sheiner’s Smile, the War Is Over, (1983)’  gets back on track.  These two sound interesting and I bought the former in a Kindle edition and the latter from AbeBooks. Gardner used her father’s diary to retell the sorry story of the bombing of Darwin in fictional form.  (See Peter Grose’s 2009 NF account, An Awkward Truth.)  Coates notes that Gardner initially idealises the American servicemen on their way to help in the aftermath but then depicts the problems that arose from the GIs monopolising taxis, booze and women.  Shiner’s novel depicts women participating in the workforce but being excluded from management roles and being badly paid.  (No surprises there). Estelle Pinney’s 1995 novel Time Out for Living apparently depicts the same inequities in a novel which Goodreads tells me is about an uncertain and exciting world full of sailors and soldiers, brawls and seduction, dancing and romance.  

Chapter 11: Loving Thine Enemies: Representations of Italian Prisoners of War in Contemporary Australian Women’s World War II Fictions’ focusses on the unjust and unjustifiable treatment of Italians and Italian Australians.  (I discovered that there’s a great deal of moral indignation about war time internment when I recently read Time Stood Still (1931), by Paul Cohen-Portheim. But all belligerent nations did it: the Allies (including in Coates’ homeland Canada) and the Axis (including in Japan and Germany.) My own mother was interned in Belgium.)

Coates begins by asserting that there has been little scholarship about the experiences of POWs because the preoccupation with military history excludes those who did not fight, i.e. POWs, and civilians who are mostly women and children. She cites historian Christine Twomey on the need to listen to the voices of civilians ‘if only to remind ourselves that the reach of war extends far beyond the military and their families alone’.  From this she segues to women novelists who have also been “doing their bit” to augment the diversities of prisoner-of-war stories, including those concerning the Japanese imprisoned on the Australian home front whose experiences have been almost completely overlooked. (p.336)

Coates discusses novels featuring local internees and how their women fared without them:

and also novels featuring POWs captured mostly in the Middle East and India and brought to Australia:

  • The Italian Romance by Joanne Carroll (2005, read before starting this blog).
  • The Paperbark Shoe by Goldie Goldbloom (2009, see my review)
  • The Bread with Seven Crusts by Susan Temby (2002, read before starting this blog)
  • The Farmer’s Wife by Dale Turner (2011)

While the analysis of the novels brings to light the idealisation of Italian men (who are all nice guys, contrasted occasionally with the Yanks who wear out their welcome) Coates concludes that…

Taken together, these novels point out the differences between historical and political accounts of the effects of war on internees and prisoners of war but add another invaluable perspective – that World War II benefited women in many tangible ways. Several escape a patriarchal culture by marrying Italian men who value their intelligence and skills and talents or, as Temby’s Eddy puts it, see them as equals to men. Moreover, by their various roles in the running of the country during the war, many find that “anything a man can do, a woman can do too, and often better.”
(p. 329).

Chapter 12: ‘Lies, Secrets and Silences, Japanese Prisoners-of-War in World War II Australian Women’s Fiction’ Coates discusses four novels, three of which I’ve read.  Interestingly all three of those are about Japanese POWs or internees in Australia, while the fourth is a fictionalised account of the life of Vivien Bullwinkle, captured by the Japanese in Indonesia:

Chapter 13: ‘No Hell Like Peacetime’, Going (Down) Under in the Land of the Fair Go

This chapter brings attention to a topic mostly overlooked in fiction: British and Japanese war brides married to Australian servicemen.

Thus, this chapter strives to counteract the omission of women’s voices by drawing upon two contemporary Australian novels that challenge the narrowly-defined national past by exposing the inadequacies of the core myths of Australian society (such as the “fair go”) and continuing to reveal the biases and gaps in the records of those who have been systematically silenced. (p. 393).

The books discussed are:

  • Gilgamesh by Joan London (2001) which tells the story of an English woman who marries an Australian soldier at the end of World War I.  (I read it before I started this blog, but see Jennifer’s review at Tasmanian Bibliophile at Large.)
  • Borrowed Landscape by Helen Heritage (2010) which is about one of the 650 Japanese women who married an Australian serviceman during the post- World War II occupation of Japan.

(BTW because Coates limits her discussion to women coming to Australia as brides of Australian servicemen — she doesn’t include the English bride Stella in Gail Jones’ 2007 Sorry, because though the wife comes to Australia, the husband is an English migrant which makes him not Australian; nor Simone Lazaroo’s 2000 The Australian Fiancé, which takes place at the end of World War II, because the fiancé has not fought in any war, nor does his unnamed Singaporean fiancée become his bride. [LH: So Eleanor Limprecht’s The Passengers (2018) isn’t discussed either because it’s about an Australian woman’s experience as a war bride in the US. See my review.)

The novels chosen for analysis focus on the impact on the women who bore the brunt of government failure to support returned soldiers — in WW1 with the disastrous soldier settlement scheme in Gilgamesh and in WW2 with unfair eligibility rules that denied pensions to war-damaged veterans in Borrowed Landscape.  Veterans were not given a ‘fair go’ in Gilgamesh and the English war bride suffers greatly from isolation, poverty and disconnection from everything she knows.  In Borrowed Landscape an adolescent narrator relates her Australian father’s struggles with war-related trauma.  It also depicts her relationship with the war bride Hanuka, providing a window on the silence of Japanese war brides about their struggle to adapt in an Australian society that expected them to assimilate.

In this chapter Coates also quotes historian Suzanne Davies, who argues that “the carefully cultivated mythology of the Anzac hero, like all militaristic mythologies, depends for its survival and strength on a selective and exclusionary construction of the past”. (pp. 396). She concludes that…

…the Anzac legend has not been a subject women writers have wished to tackle, although this oversight is being challenged by some whose work appears in this larger study. Brenda Walker’s 2005 World War I historical novel The Wing of Night, for example, undercuts the heroic Anzac tradition and calls attention to the much-overlooked dark sides of war, (see my thoughts about Part I, near the end) and both Mandy Sayer’s 2011 Love in the Years of Lunacy and Sara Knox’s 2007 The Orphan Gunner (see Ch 14 below) depict women stepping from the margins to the military – occasionally even into Anzacs’ roles as soldiers and pilots during World War II – and proving that, as I’ve suggested elsewhere in this volume, anything a man can do, a woman can do better, sometimes even effortlessly so. (pp. 396-397).

Chapter 14: ‘The New “Anzacs Two” Make Their Debut in Contemporary Australian Women’s Fictions

Three fearless authors, says Coates…

… began to imaginatively reconstruct the events of World War II from a temporal distance and bring to light important concerns about the cultural, racist, sexist and colonial biases their predecessors’ fictions had overlooked. In these women-centred narratives, writers seek to interrogate and challenge the  blinkered national past and to venture beyond its boundaries, to expose the inadequacies of the core myths of Australian society and to devise an entirely new set of stories that have been omitted from “master narratives” such as the Anzac legend. Their novels indicate that daring, intrepid women were every bit as capable as men of contributing to the war effort in that each novel features women who do not shy away from danger, but in Anzac terms, exercise “ready initiative” by saving numerous lives and hence becoming “sheroes,” or the new “Anzacs Two.” (p. 418).

Of these three, the one that tempts me is The Orphan Gunner.  (It’s available from Giramondo.)  The other two, *yawn*, well you can tell from the cover designs, eh?

Citing Kate Darian-Smith’s and Marilyn Lake’s research, Coates tells us that the first two novels conform to “a dominating narrative of heterosexual romance”, and “it was men [i.e. foreign soldiers] who “provided both the catalyst and the rationale for dramatic action” [i.e. female rights to sexual pleasure] in a climate of moral madness where norms of passivity and dependence were disrupted by the wartime environment.  The female central characters also conform to notions of Australian egalitarianism because they both fall in love and lust with musicians despite differences in class.  These men are rural, poverty-stricken, uneducated Americans without families. Marina’s brief moment of bliss in The Voyagers results in a pregnancy that compromises the offer she had to study at a prestigious music school in London. The plot and its Hollywood Happy Ending sounds implausible and melodramatic to me…

Love in the Years of Lunacy which inverts the good girl → bad girl trope to bad girl → good girl, explores inter-racial love, thus exposing tensions between nation states but also revealing tensions and contradictions within nations when Pearl discovers how badly African-American soldiers are treated by the US military.  Reading the ins and outs of this one made me thankful never to have read it.  Because I had impulsively just ordered the Knox novel, I was a bit alarmed to read that The Orphan Gunners has things in common with the risible Love in the Years of Lunacy — but the cross-dressing and impersonation of men in order to become pilots and ‘do their bit’ in The Orphan Gunner isn’t inherently implausible.  As we know from novels based on a true story like Half Wild (2017) by Pip Smith (see my review).

It seems most unfortunate that…

…Knox’s superbly researched and well-written novel has been almost entirely ignored: I am aware of only a few reviews, none of which address Knox’s challenge to the Anzac legend. Even though [the academic Julie] Wheelwright observes that stories like these of gender inequality illustrate that “with courage and imagination, women have always found ways of overcoming the most seemingly impossible restrictions”, these novels have clearly not had much impact in Australia. (p. 449).


This brings me to the end of Part 2, with Part 3 about fiction of the Vietnam War still to read.

Firstly, it must be said that while the novels selected for Part 2 were obviously relevant to Coates’ research, some of them are what gives historical fiction a bad name because they are blatantly historically inaccurate.  From one published by UQP that describes a book as set in ‘war-torn Australia’ to another that references ‘the bombing of Sydney’ one has to wonder what nonsense readers are learning from these poorly researched books.  While the blurb for Coates’ book exhorts us to undertake a re-reading of Australian national literatures, I’d recommend being selective.

TBH I began to feel that the thesis had run out of steam.  Where Part I made the case that women authors of WW1 fiction being silenced by the expectation that they would conform to the idealised depiction of the Anzacs, Part II isn’t wholly convincing that the focus on Anzacs in combat hampered acknowledgement that women on the home front are victims of war too.  IMHO It might simply be that women writers, far from being silent, were loud and clear that there were more interesting issues to write about.

But that might just be the intrusion of my own opinions.  I came of age in the 1970s when all my friends were anti-war because of Vietnam, and so I noticed that the books that Coates selected for analysis fell into two time periods:

  • written during or shortly after WW2 (i.e. published 1945-1953)
  • written during or in the wake of conservative Prime Minister John Howard’s era (1996-2007) of resurgent Anzac valorisation (i.e. 1999-2017, with outliers from 1983, 1992 and 1995).

The gap is obvious.  Where are the women’s war fictions from the 1960s and 1970s?  Maybe Part 3 about the Vietnam War fills this gap, we shall see. But when it comes to war fiction about WW2, well, if the lists at Wikipedia are any guide, a few men were ignoring the zeitgeist and writing war fictions, but women were setting their own agenda and writing about other issues of interest during this progressive period in Australia.

Overall, however, I found Shooting Blanks to be fascinating reading. By honing in on a particular issue in this survey of women’s writing from a century or so, Coates has delivered a comprehensive analysis of developments in a significant aspect of women’s fiction.  In the absence of an up-to-date ‘companion’ to Australian literature*, Coates’ book is really valuable, and I have some interesting new additions to my library thanks to Part 2!


I’m think of making have made a Page for Australian War Fiction, so over to you, dear reader… are there novels not mentioned here that I  should include?  Please add a link to reviews if you have them.

*The Cambridge Companion to the Australian Novel (2023) doesn’t have a chapter on women’s writing at all, see my discontented review.

BTW Project Muse tells me that Coates was also the primary editor of the seven-volume Women and War (History of Feminism) series published by Routledge in 2020.

Author: Donna Coates
Title: Shooting Blanks at the Anzac Legend, Australian Women’s War Fictions 
Publisher: Sydney University Press, 2023
Cover image: Poppy day (1982) by Barbara Hanrahan, cover design by Miguel Yamin
ASIN:  B0CM4QYCQL, Kindle edition, 567 pages,  including an index (345 in the paperback edition)
Source: Personal library, purchased for the Kindle from You Know Who.

I owe my discovery of this short novel ideal for the 1937 Club — hosted at Kaggsy’s Bookish Ramblings and Stuck in a Book
…to Dorian from Eiger Mönch & Jungfrau when he wrote an enticing review for German Lit Week back in 2016.

But I am very late to the party… I bought the book there and then,  but it was very nearly a casualty of the Kindle where so many good books are forgotten because they have no presence on the shelves. It was just luck that it turned up among other books from 1937 for the club week…

This is the book description for After Midnight, by Irmgard Keun (1905-1982), translated by Anthea Bell:

Sanna and her ravishing friend Gerti would rather speak of love than politics, but in 1930s Frankfurt, politics cannot be escaped–even in the lady’s bathroom. Crossing town one evening to meet up with Gerti’s Jewish lover, a blockade cuts off the girls’ path–it is the Führer in a motorcade procession, and the crowd goes mad striving to catch a glimpse of Hitler’s raised “empty hand.” Then the parade is over, and in the long hours after midnight Sanna and Gerti will face betrayal, death, and the heartbreaking reality of being young in an era devoid of innocence or romance.

The narrative voice is very convincing.  Sanna is not as naïve or artless as she seems at first.  She sounds a bit like the stereotypical ‘ditzy’ young woman, but it’s cover for her discerning observations, sometimes delivered with droll sarcasm.  At one stage when she’s in a bar with her friend, she starts up a prattling conversation in an effort to distract attention from Gerti’s imprudent opinions that could get them both into trouble among the people wearing party badges. She’d seen for herself how eager some were to inform on others when she was in Cologne.  So the reader is made aware that even at this stage of the Nazi regime, it’s not just the obvious signs of authority such as the Blackshirts that are to be feared… there are also people among her social crowd who would report any signs of dissent.

We are living in the time of the greatest German denunciation movement ever, you see. Everyone has to keep an eye on everyone else. Everyone’s got power over everyone else. Everyone can get everyone else locked up. There aren’t many can withstand the temptation to make use of that kind of power. (p.100)

And when she reports on the enthusiasm for Hitler’s visit to her city, her thoughts show that she sees through the empty spectacle.  She’s very much the outsider, the one who is observing, not joining in, not unless it’s necessary to avoid attracting attention.  So when the Nazi anthem is sung to the accompaniment of the compulsory Nazi salute, she does it too, to avoid the wrath of the crowd.  The implication is obvious: how many others were paying lip service too?

Authoritarianism is everywhere: from Gerti’s friend Kurt in his SA uniform, making her sit down almost forcibly so that everyone would think she was his property.  But Gerti’s in love with Dieter, who’s a Jew, which brings forth Sanna’s private refusal to engage with labels such a person of mixed race, first class or maybe third class — though she’s not naïve about what Dieter really wants from Gerti even if he is polite, and nice, and young, with soft, brown, round, velvety eyes.

Dieter is what they call a person of mixed race, first class or maybe third class—I can never get the hang of these labels. But anyway, Gerti’s not supposed to have anything to do with him because of the race laws. If all Gerti does is simply sit in the corner of a café with Dieter, holding hands, they can get punished severely for offending against national feeling. Still, what does a girl care about the law when she wants a man? And if a man wants a girl, it’s all the same to him if the executioner’s standing right behind him with his axe, so long as he gets one thing. Once he’s had it, of course, it is not all the same to him any more. (p.17)

It’s painful to read about Dieter’s father’s quarrels with Algin (another young friend) who objects to the Nazis.  Dieter’s father — who is exempt from the restrictions on Jewish business because he runs an export company — thinks that they’ve put the German mentality in order and saved him from the communists. In 1937 Irmgard Keun could not have known what this man’s fate was to be.

But it’s also painful to realise that while Sanna thinks she’s very clever at seeing through propaganda which seduces others like her Aunt Adelheid, subverting the regime on the sly so that only those who agree with her know about it, achieves nothing.  It turns out that her boyfriend Franz has been in Gestapo custody and the novel ends with the pair in flight because he has murdered the informer.  Her abrupt coming-of-age and loss of innocence ends as it did for so many with escape rather than resistance — and, as foreshadowed early in the book, what else could we expect under the circumstances?

My heart always stands still when I hear those speeches, because how do I know I’m not one of the sort who are going to be smashed? And the worst of it is that I just don’t understand what’s really going on. I’m only gradually getting the hang of the things you must be careful not to do.

[…] I was scared stiff someone might notice I didn’t understand a word of it. Göring and the other ministers often shout over the radio, very loud and clear and angry. “There are still some who have not understood what it is all about, but we shall know how to deal with them.” I hate hearing that kind of thing, it’s creepy, because I still don’t know what it is all about, or what they mean. And it’s far too dangerous to ask anyone. Judging by things I’ve picked up from what I’ve heard and read, I could be either criminal or of chronically unsound mind. Neither of which must come out or I’ll be done for. If I’m criminal I’ll go to prison, and if I’m of chronically unsound mind they’ll operate on me so that I can’t get married and have children. (p.63)

Mixing with people who speak out is risky:

Manderscheid gets terrified when Heini talks like this. He would like to go, and then again he’d like to stay. He stays because he’s tired. He is afraid of Heini, he is afraid of the government, which can take his job away. He wants to live. His wife wants to live. His children want to live. (p.86)

And every writer faces a dilemma:

Algin has joined us.  He is sitting there, pale and gloomy, his eyes dark caverns, his pale hands lying on the table. He has had another letter from the Reich Chamber of Literature. There’s going to be another purge of writers, and Algin will probably get eliminated. He might yet save himself by writing a long poem about the Führer, something he has been most reluctant to do so far. But even that might be dangerous. Because National Socialist writers might take exception to his daring to write about the Führer without being an old campaigner for the cause. Similarly, he daren’t write a Nazi novel, because it wouldn’t be fitting. However, if he doesn’t write a Nazi novel that makes him undesirable. People still like reading his books, people still want to print them, and that’s not right either.  (p. 97).

After Midnight read in the present day is a poignant reminder that awareness of a morally bankrupt regime doesn’t necessarily equip anyone to resist it in an effective way.

About the author, from Goodreads:
Irmgard Keun (1905 – 1982) was a German novelist. She is noted for her portrayals of the life of women in the Weimar Republic as well as the early years of the Nazi Germany era. She was born into an affluent family and was given the autonomy to explore her passions. After her attempts at acting ended at the age of 16, Keun began working as a writer after years of working in Hamburg and Greifswald. Her books were eventually banned by Nazi authorities but gained recognition during the final years of her life.

See also the review at Jaqui Wine’s Journal.

Author: Irmgard Keun
Title: After Midnight (Nach Mitternacht)
Translated from the German by Anthea Bell
Afterword by Geoff Wilkes
Cover design: not acknowledged
Publisher: Melville House, 2011, first published 1937
ASIN: ‎ B004J4WKAQ, eBook, 170 pages
Source: Purchased from the Kindle from You Know Who, $14.83

Posted by: Lisa Hill | April 14, 2024

Decline and Fall on Savage Street (2017), by Fiona Farrell

Fiona Farrell ONZM is a New Zealand novelist, poet and playwright, and she writes non-fiction too, notably about the 2011 Christchurch earthquake.  I discovered her writing last year when I read (and reviewed) The Deck (2023), and promptly ordered Decline and Fall on Savage Street and (mistakenly thinking it was a novel) its companion NF title The Villa at the Edge of the Empire (2015).   From her  website, I learned the origins of these two books:

In 2013, Farrell received Creative New Zealand’s premier award, the Michael King Fellowship, to write twin volumes, one fiction, one non-fiction, prompted by the Christchurch earthquakes and the reconstruction of the city. The Villa at the Edge of the Empire, was shortlisted for the non-fiction section in the 2016 Ockham NZ Book Awards while its fictional twin, Decline and Fall on Savage Street was published to critical acclaim in 2017 and received that year’s NZSA Heritage Book Award for fiction. Together, the books have been described as ‘a wonderful piece of art.’

Decline and Fall on Savage Street is certainly absorbing reading, though it is not until Part Two that the Christchurch earthquake makes its deadly appearance.  The preceding 200-odd pages compress to cover the story of a house, beginning in 1906.  This is the blurb:

A fascinating prize-winning novel about a house with a fanciful little turret, built by a river. Unfolding within its rooms are lives of event and emotional upheaval. A lot happens. And the tumultuous events of the twentieth century also leave their mark, from war to economic collapse, the deaths of presidents and princesses to new waves of music, art, architecture and political ideas. Meanwhile, a few metres away in the river, another creature follows a different, slower rhythm. And beneath them all, the planet moves to its own immense geological time. With insight, wide-ranging knowledge and humour, this novel explores the same territory as its non-fiction twin…

Farrell has a gift for description with occasional sly wit, as you can see in Chapter 2: The Floor Plan, Spring 1908:

A villa.  Not too large.  Not one of the twenty-seven roomed fantasies that introduce his magnum opus: his catalogue of One Hundred Designs for New Zealand Residences.  Not the two-storyed extravagance of Smoking Room, Billiard Room, Fernery and the rest, but something more modest: ten rooms, perhaps.  A substantial villa for the man who is on his way, and for his dependants.  A villa combining tradition with modernity, the best of the past with contemporary comfort, for that is the style for this country, where public buildings favour imperial gravitas with columns and Roman porticoes, along with ample windows and modern plumbing.

And when they leave the public realm, the citizens whom luck and industry have favoured like to stroll home to one or two storeys of vaguely Gothic timber and gabling, or perhaps Georgian brick, with bathroom and kitchen in the contemporary American manner, ideally linked to the modern marvels of metropolitan sewerage systems, gas and electricity, all set behind the fences of a pleasantly private quarter-acre.  A house like this, for example: the ten-roomed villa, taking shape beneath the architect’s busy pen.  (p.11)

The first family to live in this villa is a large one and Farrell traces a patchwork of events in their lives, in chapters that move biennially through most of the century,  interleaved with the endless life-cycle of eels in the river.  Each chapter begins and end mid-sentence, and people come and go, leaving behind only traces of their activity in the house and garden.  When the last of that family is gone in the 70s, the house is found by Min, a bit of a flower-child who is looking for a share-house.  The villa has seen better days:

Midwinter, damp and grey, the river a ribbon of low-hanging fog.  And there it was, half-buried beneath periwinkle, its walls dimpled with damp rot under a cloak of ivy. A leafless vine entangled the front porch, ornamented with the fluffy seed heads of old man’s beard and fallen leaf lay knee-deep on the path between overhanging branches and the whole place reeked of damp and decay, cat pee and desolation.

Perfect.

Min stood in the overgrown garden, jeans soaked to the knees.  She’d regret that later: flares took absolutely ages to dry.  Beneath her sodden boots lay bricks and broken glass.  Beer bottles littered the porch, and someone had set a fire at the foot of the steps where a half-burned wire wove rusted over charred wood and a shabby sofa and armchairs slumped either side in a parody of three-piece gentility.  (p.127)

Min persuades her friends to buy it together. They made an offer, all chipping in as much as they could:

$500 from Steve who had a job that year at the Botanic Gardens, $1000 from Pete who had sold his car, the entire bequest left to Min by her Auntie Eve who had married a GI during the war and gone to live in Wisconsin, $2500 from Mack, and $1000 from Liz who had a scholarship, was doing law and drafted a proper contract that used phrases they never before had encountered, such as ‘tenants in common’ who between them had managed to raise $7000 which the agent said was reasonable. (p.132)

But it’s not enough.  Mack, to Min’s surprise because she’d had no idea that his family was wealthy, comes up with another $5000, and so they lived together more or less in shared harmony till the 1980s, when Mack leaves Min and their daughter Sunny because he’s moved on from political activism.  Pete, who moved on ages ago to be with Thanh in Melbourne, visits when Min is packing up their stuff, and he’s not well.  In an example of what may seem like redundant detail, but is actually referring to a tumultuous event…

He shivers.  He’s felt cold for days now, his head aches and he is so very, very tired.  He could lie down right now, right here, on the floor.

He stands with a carton in his arms.  Sways. Falls heavily against the cupboard.

‘Whoops,’ he says. ‘Sorry, Min. Wrecking the place.’

Min doesn’t look up.  ‘Doesn’t matter,  she says, tossing a copy of Backyard Farming into a bag.  ‘Someone else’s problem now.’  (p.168)

It does matter, when the reader joins the dots and remembers the AIDS epidemic that launched itself on an unsuspecting world in 1981 and as of 2023 has killed 40+ million people.

Later that decade another change of ownership introduces a blended family: an interior decorator with a taste for garish colours called Stephie who bonds with Paul the doctor who treated her son Ben’s broken arm.  Alas, he has obnoxious children determined to make her pay for ‘breaking up their family’, and his life seems harder than it ought to be.  I don’t know much about NZ politics of that era but Paul’s struggle with budget cuts in the public hospital system reminded me of the Thatcherites who took over in NZ, (and the economic migrants who fled to Australia, and probably regretted it when we got a Thatcherite of our own!)

A change of pace is signalled in Part Two by a change of dating.  Chapters no longer progress by years but by days and months, and the first day, 3 September 2010 is the day when Janey and Rob are painting their bedroom. The kids were quiet behind closed doors in their rooms, asleep or sneakily on their phones or transfixed by the computer’s pallid glow.  As the date ticks over to the 4th, Rob is standing in the dark at the window, fully awake, alert, and not quite sure why.  

And then the window gives a little preliminary rattle and something roars up, a rumbling rises beneath his feet, felt in every bone as much as heard, a deep visceral explosion that flings him up into the air, so that he loses balance and falls hard against the sill.  Which is in motion, as is the whole house.  It sways and jolts as if gathered up by immense hands and brutally shaken, and with the shaking the windows crack and there’s the crash of things falling, dwang and soffit splitting asunder as the momentum gathers, stronger, harder and from long training he knows he must get under the doorway.  That is the safest place.  Beneath a lintel. So somehow as the floor bucks and jumps, he stumbles over trestles and ladders to its protective frame.

Janey has got there before him, flung abruptly from sleep facedown on the floor, scrambling towards the door because above all the din there is a single, high-pitched cry that pulls her like a wire to Poppy’s room, to her daughter who is screaming in the jolting dark in her room along the hallway. (p.217)

Poppy, who thinks that the monster under the bed has finally come to get her.

The vivid images of this catastrophe gradually ease as the family transitions into the awful situation that was reality for so many.  Alongside other international aid agencies, Australia was there to help with the immediate aftermath.  We sent Search and Rescue and Disaster Victim Identification (DVI) teams, 300+ police, counsellors and medical assistance, and the government pledged $6million alongside ordinary Australians giving generously to charities such as the Red Cross.  But beyond these immediate needs, there were ordinary families scrambling for makeshift accommodation in a ruined city, dealing with traumatised children, working in difficult conditions from ‘home’ while offices in the city were inspected for safety, and waiting interminably for a bureaucratic insurance industry to enable reconstruction — if indeed the house can be repaired.  Marriages buckled along with the roads and buildings…

Decline and Fall on Savage Street is a sobering story, reminding us that the earth beneath our feet is not as solid as it seems.  But the parallel story of the eel in the river is a metaphor for human resilience: change is constant, and life goes on.

You may also be interested to read Time to Remember (2021), by Janna Ruth, see my review.  It’s a novel about young adults who were children at the time of the Christchurch earthquake.


Although about 100 earth tremors occur each year in Australia, the continent is sited in the middle of a tectonic plate and destructive earthquakes such as the 1989 Newcastle earthquake (NSW)  are rare. (See the Australian Climate Science (ACS) website for an interactive map.)  While the ACS reminds us that large earthquakes can occur anywhere in Australia, and without warning, it’s probably true that other kinds of devastating natural disasters such as fire and flood are front of mind in Australia.  But in New Zealand, which straddles the Indo-Australian and Pacific tectonic plates, noticeable earthquake activity is frequent and people are much more aware of the potential for disaster.

Christchurch is not the only city to experience a catastrophic earthquake — Napier was almost entirely rebuilt (in Art Deco style) after the deadly 1931 Hawkes Bay earthquake which killed 256 people, and Wellington copped a magnitude 8.2 earthquake, the most powerful ever recorded in New Zealand.  But that was in 1855 when the population was only about 6000 and there were very few casualties.

Image Credit:

Map of world tectonic plates, by CIA – http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook/reference_maps/physical_world.html, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=23270082

Author: Fiona Farrell
Title: Decline and Fall on Savage Street
Publisher: Vintage (Penguin Random House NZ), 2017
ISBN: 9780143770626, pbk., 359 pages
Source: Personal library, purchased from Fishpond.


To discover other titles in #AYearofNZLit click the logo below.

 

 

Posted by: Lisa Hill | April 13, 2024

Spell the Month in Books April 2024

Spell the Month in Books is a linkup hosted on Reviews From the Stacks on the first Saturday of each month, but that’s the day for #6Degrees, so here we are, a week later instead.

Thanks to a heads-up from Jennifer at Tasmanian Bibliophile at Large, I know that this month the theme is Poisson d’Avril. The French version of April Fool’s Day involves fish, so books can be related to fish, bodies of water, or comedy.

Links go to my reviews.

A Body of Water, by Beverley Farmer (BTW Giramondo has published a reissue of Farmer’s 1980 debut novel Alone.)

Paris Under Water, how the City of Light Survived the Great Flood of 1910, by Jeffrey H Jackson

Rivers, the Life Blood of Australia by Ian Hoskins

In Every Wave by Charles Quimper

Love Like Water by Meme McDonald

 


This year’s favourite April Fool’s Day Joke,
courtesy of the SES (State Emergency Service) Facebook page:

May be an image of car and text that says "DRIVER REVIVER Bushells re SES DRIVER ER REVIVER"

 

VICSES is urging road users to open their sunroofs today as Driver Reviver takes to the sky in an Easter Monday first.

Four state-of-the-art ‘smart drones’ will be dropping free Bushells Coffee and Arnott’s biscuits directly into vehicles on major arterials in a way to assist drivers to break their thirst, hunger and reduce the road toll.

VICSES Deputy Chief Officer Aprilio Firsty said “simply open your sunroofs today and let the free snacks rain!”.

The drones will be controlled by Driver Reviver volunteers from VICSES and other services from a central control centre utilising advanced technology.

Elon Musk.  Hmmm.

I like long form essays about current issues, and having discovered interesting things to read in the Jewish Quarterly lent to me by a friend, I succumbed to subscribing to this journal when they made the decision to change to long form essays.  The first one to arrive in my letter box was Dark Star, Elon Musk’s Dangerous Turn by award winning author, reporter and screenwriter, Richard Cooke.

His website tells me that Cooke is:

The author of two books, Tired of Winning, A Chronicle of American Decline, (which has a picture of That Dreadful Man on the cover) and a work of literary criticism in the Black Inc series on Australian writers: On Robyn Davidson. He’s also the former US correspondent and current contributing editor to the The Monthly magazine, the former sports editor of The Saturday Paper, and the former arts editor of Time Out Sydney. For a time he edited The Chaser newspaper, and has been published in the Washington Post, The New York Times, The Guardian, The New Republic, WIRED and the Paris Review.

In other words, his interests range far and wide.  He’s certainly a compelling writer: what he has to say about Elon Musk and his ambitions sent a chill down my spine…

He has a habit of inserting himself into major events to which he has little connection. (p.19)

We in Australia certainly remember how he tried to intervene in the rescue of those Thai schoolboys trapped in a flooded cave in 2018, offering to design a submarine to rescue them and insulting the leader of the rescue operation in a disgraceful way.  But that is not the least of it.  Other interventions have been much more alarming, with real world effects…

In the early phase of the war in Ukraine, Musk responded to a personal appeal from the Ukrainian vice prime minister by enabling the Starlink electronic system to replace the damaged telecommunications infrastructure within 24 hours of being asked to do it.

It was significant, and canny, that Fedorov made his appeal in public, but not everyone was impressed.  ‘In that moment, Elon Musk, the man, seemed to be acting almost like a state of his own, a foreign entity that people around the world can call on for humanitarian aid in the way they might call on a government,’ Marina Koren wrote in The Atlantic, before offering some comfort. Musk’s ‘outsize reputation’, she assured readers, ‘doesn’t always match what he can actually control.’ Internally at SpaceX, the company’s president Gwynne Shotwell, argued that the private subsidy of the Ukrainian war effort was a mistake. She was negotiating a US$145 million contract with the Pentagon, which would fund Starlink on behalf of the Ukrainians, and was exasperated when Musk decided to continue on regardless. (p.20)

And then [as if Musk were a grown-up kid role-playing the computer game Civilisation], it was revealed that he had placed limitations on the technology which actually affected military operations. When the Ukrainians protested, Musk told them that ‘Starlink was not meant to be involved in wars. It was so people can watch Netflix and chill and get online for school and do good peaceful things, not drone strikes.’ (p.21)

Whatever the rights and wrongs of that or any war, it creates more than an uneasy feeling when a lone individual with massive wealth who does not hold public office can make decisions like that, eh?

Some called it treason.  Musk was, they said, undermining the US State Department’s policy on Ukraine.  Others attacked the lack of wisdom that had granted him these powers in the first place.  Other European militaries began an urgent search for a Starlink alternative so as not to find themselves in the same position. […]

Musk’s own admission — that Starlink had been geofenced for the whole war — had serious implications.  It meant Musk could not only end the advance of a foreign military with a word, but also set the shape of that advance beforehand, making hard boundaries for the conflict, by himself and in secret.  Few individuals have been so central to a war effort since the duelling atomic physicists of World  War II. Whatever was happening on the ground, Musk controlled the upper limits of the sky above it. (p.22)

Belatedly, US officials began to complain about American dependency on Musk, ranging from the future of energy and transportation to the exploration of space. 

They mentioned that Musk also controls the largest nationwide network of electric vehicle chargers in the United States, making him critical to the future rollout of EVs, whether they are Teslas or not. (p.23)

[There are now four EVs on my route round the block with Amber, three of them Teslas.  They charge up at home from rooftop solar with storage batteries.  They’d be Tesla too.]

And while Ukraine was calling on Elon Musk, Elon Musk was calling for advice from his Twitter followers, and the one who suggested taking Starlink offline to de-escalate the war was a Malaysia-based political commentator called Ian Miles Cheong, whose massive audience consists of American conservatives.

For centuries, diplomacy rested on carefully attuned language. Diplomats were expected to be shrewd and wise, schooled in history and languages.  It goes almost without saying that a sh__-posting social media account is the opposite of all this, making a mockery of it.  And yet thanks to Elon Musk, figures like Ian Miles Cheong have more purchase on international affairs than the editors of Foreign Affairs.  What is apparently trivial or unserious is in fact deathly serious.  Because of Starlink, a poster in a Kuala Lumpur bedroom is directly linked to the Ukrainian front lines.

The language of power still treats internet chatter as beneath consideration, unimportant almost by definition.  Like the Ukrainians, we find ourselves suddenly surprised: it is social media, not cable or newspapers or conclaves, that now sit at the epicentre of power. Like it or not, the first internet troll tycoon defines an era as much as the first internet troll president of the United States. (p.24)

The tech elite subscribe to a set of right-wing, hierarchical beliefs described by the acronym TESCREAL, which stands for Transhumanism, Extropianism, Singularitarianism, Cosmism, Rationalism, Effective Altriuism and Longtermism. Unpacked, these ideas sound like something out of SF fantasy. [Merely researching some of the ideas behind Musk’s ‘philosophy’ has taken me to some very odd places online, and I stopped looking because (as we all know) we are tracked everywhere we go online by advertisers… and who knows who else?] But from Cooke’s article I gathered that Musk playing around with interplanetary ambitions and a new space industrial revolution is not just a matter of thousands of his Starlink satellites colonising Mars to create a new society over which he has full control.  The longtermism of TESCREAL is concerned with prophecy:

…what will best secure humanity’s future existence and flourishing for the longest possible time? Humans must become immortal, or reach great longevity, and to do this they must leave Earth behind, for it is mortal. […] Musk dwells on existential risks to the human species, such as nuclear weapons or artificial intelligence […]  Extreme longtermism can appear callous or unempathetic, prioritising trillions of  hypothetical ‘future humans’, some born billions of years in the future, over suffering in the here-and-now.

His commitment to extreme versions of free speech without constraint can be seen from Twitter.  Just as Murdoch withstood decades of massive losses from The Australian newspaper that makes no pretence of editorial independence because it exists to buttress his political influence, Twitter a.k.a. X has cost Musk billions. Cooke says that Elon Musk supports the abhorrent neo-Nazi views expressed on Twitter because he agrees with them, and the people who hold them and that he purchased Twitter in part to promote and protect them. 

Scary stuff.


Update, the next day: Richard Cooke is writing a book about Wikipedia, and you can listen to a fascinating interview about that here at Down Round.

Author: Richard Cooke
Title: Dark Star, Elon Musk’s Dangerous Turn (Jewish Quarterly Feb 2024)
Edited by Jonathan Pearlman
Publisher:  Morry Schwarz,  2024
ISBN: 9781760644345, pbk., 86 pages
Source: Subscription

Even if you’ve never read a word of Frank Moorhouse’s fiction (a deficiency you might want to rectify) Matthew Lamb’s new biography is very good reading indeed.

Strange Paths is Volume 1 of a planned 2-volume biography of this legendary author, and it covers the period up to 1974 , with the publication of The Electrical Experience when he was in his forties.  The writing of this important biography was supported by the Hazel Rowley Fellowship which was awarded to Lamb in 2016.  The following is from their 28/11/23 press release, which shows how the fellowship came at a pivotal moment:

Frank Moorhouse (1938-2023) was legendary in Australian literary and cultural life. Matthew’s book is more than a biography; it is a cultural history of the times that shaped Frank Moorhouse and which Moorhouse himself helped to shape. This landmark study, from Moorhouse’s own publisher, is the fascinating and comprehensive story of how one of Australia’s most original writers and pioneer of the discontinuous narrative came to be.

“One of the aspects of Frank that drew me to him as a biographical subject,” Matthew told us, “was that he understood and cultivated those often hidden but utterly necessary networks of dedicated individuals in Australia who provide the conditions for our literature to be created. This was not only something I researched, but which I also experienced in developing this project.”

“It is no exaggeration to say that this publication would have been impossible without the support of the Hazel Rowley Literary Fellowship, which I received at just the right moment. After initially scoping the idea of a biography of Frank Moorhouse, then considering the enormity of the task ahead – the time and cost that, as an independent scholar and writer, was beyond my capacity – I was going to abandon it altogether. The Hazel Rowley Literary Fellowship allowed me to continue.”

If you want to help ensure that other important biographies don’t slip through the cracks, you can donate to the Hazel Rowley Fellowship here.


In the process of reading this biography, I’ve found it fascinating to read Moorhouse’s youthful examination of his own reasons for writing.

At sixteen, he applied for a cadetship listing these reasons for wanting to be a journalist:

  1. Writing gives me the fullest satisfaction.  The finishing of an original story imbues me with a feeling of contentment and achievement.
  2. The desire to express my opinions and to have them noticed.
  3. My aversion to prejudices and bigotry which compels me to try to destroy false notions and to always give the truth.  Coupled with this is:
  4. My wish to see the world a free and a just place not a world of propaganda, lies, censorship and bias.
  5. My interest in other people and in current affairs because I believe that only be being fully conscious of the world about us can we live and judge fairly.
  6. To learn to be a skilful and honest journalist.
  7. To serve my fellow citizens.” (p.105)

In 1957, still in his teens, Moorhouse used a journal that he kept for a short time to articulate how the act of writing made him feel:

i must express the inner excitement i feel
after i have written a short story
i get up and walk around and around
i look at things but do not see them
i touch things but do not feel them
i am frightened to read or touch
my story
as though i fear that it will dissolve
or read foolish
i lose all self consciousness
and a feeling replaces it
i am inclined to strut
i feel as if the story was a part of me
and after great pain and effort i have torn it
away
but my body does not feel any pain after its removal
only restless excitement and a type of joy
or just joy
no particular type
a gladness that the piece of me has been removed
a pride in the place removed
and a relieved happy feeling in my self
for quite a long time after the writing of the story
i am frightened to read it
and do so with trepidation.  (p.152)


More to come later, I’m about half way through…

Author: Matthew Lamb
Title: Frank Moorhouse: Strange Paths
Publisher: Knopf (an imprint of Penguin Random House), 2023
Cover design: Adam Laszczuk
ISBN: 9780143786122, hbk., 462 pages including An Author’s Note, Sources, and Acknowledgements.  (The Index will be in Volume 2.)
Review copy courtesy of Penguin Random House

Posted by: Lisa Hill | April 7, 2024

The Salted Air (2016) by Thom Conroy

If anything in this review raises issues for you, help is available at Beyond Blue.


Thom Conroy’s The Salted Air was one of the books that prompted me to initiate #AYearofNZLit, co-hosted with Theresa from Theresa Smith Writes. I have a shelf dedicated to my NZ Lit TBR and having enjoyed Conroy’s historical novel The Naturalist (2014) so much, I really wanted to read this next novel.  I just needed a catalyst to tackle this growing shelf of interesting books!

The Salted Air is a departure in style and preoccupations from The Naturalist.  It’s a contemporary novel, narrated by a young woman called Djuna.  This is the blurb:

28-year-old Djuna is without a foothold. The suicide of her partner has left her derailed and casting about for the joy she fears may be gone for good. Her parents’ relationship has disintegrated, her family home is occupied by Burmese refugees, and she is drawn to the one man she must reject.
In pursuit of a roving father and a renewed sense of belonging, Djuna wanders from Wellington to the natural beauty of New Zealand’s remote East Cape. Narrated in vivid, confessional vignettes, The Salted Air tells a story of transgression, love and hope.

The style of the novel is driven by Djuna’s experience of writing with her parents.  Each of them would write about their day in a notebook which was intended for the others to read.  There were no secrets; it was an open way of communicating about whatever seemed important at the time.  So at this moment of crisis in her life, Djuna records scraps of her thoughts in brief chapters, some of which are only half a page long.  The narrative is mostly chronological but there are reflections on her past.

I hesitate to use the loaded term ‘hippies’ about Djuna’s parents but her father Eugene in particular is drawn to an alternative lifestyle which is governed by values outside the mainstream. He is, at least superficially, not interested in money or possessions or the security that a stable relationship can bring (and that his daughter needs at this time).  These parents are interested in following their own impulses, and in altruism.  But their marriage cracks apart just when Djuna needs them most.

What sort of thing makes me feel safe? I’m at a loss.  I fumble for an image, anything at all, and arrive at my mother sitting at the kitchen table in our house on the Palmerston North river terrace.  She looks up from a piece of stationery, a pen in hand, an envelope and a handwritten letter beside her.  A cup of tea, one greying strand of hair on her temple, contemplative, startled to see me.  I watch her there long enough to see the corners of her mouth turning up so that I know she’ll call me to her and hold me and I won’t be out here by the rushing pounding darkness of the sea any more, out here beneath the infinite and sterile plain of the heavens.

What else brings me safety? It takes a moment to come to me, but there it is: my father, also in a kitchen.  Only he’s standing. He’s talking, of course. Even in my imagining of him, he’s talking.  (p.226)

Coming to terms with the tragedy that has befallen her, Djuna realises that these nostalgic memories of childhood are promises that don’t deliver.  Her father is big on hugs, and reassurances that everything will be ok, and that love takes you down a road and you just gotta follow along and see where it takes you.  But neither he nor Djuna are being honest with each other in the way that their notebooks were.  His comfort is hollow but would he be different if he knew her sordid secret?

Djuna’s mother, Lucy, has taken off overseas to America, where she is unhappily managing home for disabled men.  And Eugene — drawn in more detail than the absent mother — is somewhere remote up north.  The family home is being rented to an organisation that supports Burmese refugees, and there’s a suggestion that it be donated to them permanently.  When Djuna finally tracks down her father, he is camping out with a Maori collective and having an affair with a Maori woman called Reina.  Using his share of the proceeds from the marriage, which now appears to be over, he wants to buy into this collective, for reasons that he thinks are altruistic and the Maori find paternalistic.

Although not explored in much detail, questions of Maori land ownership and European values arise, and there’s a gloomy suggestion that they are incompatible.  Reina’s son Tama tells Djuna that their parents are drawn to each other despite their racial differences because they are dreamers, but the affair won’t last.  Dreams end, sleepers awake.  On Waitangi Day, a woman disrupts what Djuna and her sister-in-law think is a celebration with an impassioned plea reminiscent of the angst that now surrounds Australia Day:

‘You can wish me a happy Waitangi Day,’ the woman begins, ‘but what if I don’t have much to celebrate? What if it is not so happy for me? How can I celebrate, have a big party and talk about the future when the past is still all muddled up?’ (p.252)

And when Eugene tells Tama about wanting to put money into the camping ground, Reina isn’t happy.  Recounting this to Djuna, he tells her what he has come to understand:

‘Pakeha and Maori land, Eugene says, smiling.  ‘She says they don’t mix.’ Now my father shrugs, a hopeless immigrant again after years of apparent integration.  He knows she’s right.  He knows better. (p.188)

But Djuna herself is impulsive like her father — she is driven by her own needs at a time when her moral compass is astray.  She feels guilty about Harvey’s suicide because she deliberately left him alone — knowing what he might do — because she was weary taking responsibility for his depression.  She lapses into an affair with Harvey’s brother Bruce, and then (inexplicably, given she has no experience of being a parent and hardly knows the child) she takes his small, imperious daughter Ella on the quest to locate Eugene.  This is at the request of Joanne, Bruce’s wife, so that she and Bruce can attend to their failing marriage. (Joanne knows nothing about Djuna’s betrayal. Nor does she know that his infidelity is the least of it.)

Conroy knows better than to tie up a mess like this with a neat and happy ending.  There are signs emerging that Djuna has given up on her fantasy of a Perfect Family that will always be there for her, and that a friendship with Lyle may become something more.  But for the detritus of the other failing relationships, there is no resolution.  Why would there be?

The writing is beautiful.  The messiness of life, less so.

About the author (drawn from the NZ site, ANZ Literature):

Thom Conroy is a fiction writer and senior lecturer in Creative Writing at Massey University in New Zealand.

As far as I can tell, he is the author of two novels: the bestselling historical novel The Naturalist (2014), and The Salted Air (2016).

His short fiction has been published widely in New Zealand, Australia and the United States. His work has been recognised by Best American Short Stories 2012 and has won various other awards, including the Katherine Ann Porter Prize in Fiction and the Sunday Star Times Short Fiction Competition.

He is currently working on a novel around environment impacts associated with intensive agriculture and a linked collection of short fiction entitled Emergency Procedures.


Other reviews are at Booksellers NZ The Reader, Stuff NZ, and the NZ Herald.

Author: Thom Conroy
Title: The Salted Air
Publisher: Vintage (Random House New Zealand), 2016
Cover design by Sam Bunny
ISBN: 9781775538820, pbk., 302 pages
Source: Personal copy


To discover other titles in #AYearofNZLit click the logo below.

 

This month’s #6Degrees, hosted by Kate from Books are my Favourite and Best starts with our own bookshelves.  We start with a travel book.

Travel books are ubiquitous now, but most of them are anonymous in the Lonely Planet/DK sense because we don’t know who the author is.  Of those that are authored, few have a distinctive style and a huge catalogue of titles like H V Morton (1892-1979).  He was a pioneering travel writer from Britain, and after I discovered In Search of London (1951) before my first ever trip back to the UK in 2001, I also read A Traveller in Italy (1964) before a trip to Italy and  A Stranger in Spain (1955) before a trip to Spain.  You might be wondering why travel books written more than half a century ago were the catalyst for me to collect a shelf of Morton titles, and the answer is that he wrote in captivating ways about sites now labelled Places of Interest and beset by selfie-taking mass tourism.  The places haven’t changed but the experience of visiting them has.

Morton was not a deep thinker, and his interests didn’t include Bookish Moments.  My travel blog features Bookish Moments from my travels. Some of these are planned, as in my pilgrimage to the birthplaces of Tolstoy and Chekhov and others are unexpected, as in the display of artwork from The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupery at the Fullerton Hotel in Singapore. But my jottings are Homage Lite, compared to the exquisite essays to be found in Spinoza’s Overcoat, Travels with Writers and Poets, (2020) by Subhash Jaireth. (Subhash, who is one of my favourite writers, has a new book out BTW, called George Orwell’s Elephant and other essaysone to look forward to.)

What I like about Subhash’s travel writing, is that he is unabashed about his love of literature and how that informs where he goes and what he does there.  We can see the same thing in Antoni Jach’s recent novel Travelling Companions (2021).  His narrator is like me,  he likes art galleries and museums, historic sites and remarkable buildings; and he likes to loiter in cafés and restaurants and soak up the ambience while enjoying a variety of European cuisines.  Where we part company is that he seeks company in the evenings.  No thankyou, I’ve had enough of people by then!

How did an introvert like me become a teacher, with wall-to-wall people all day long?  I can’t explain it adequately, but I can tell you that I survived with a simple strategy.  When I got home (after greeting The Spouse who was usually contentedly cooking dinner) I would escape to the quiet and read a book for about half an hour to restore my sanity.  Which is why I like books about the reading life and how it sustains us: Debra Adelaide’s 2019 The Innocent Reader and Carmel Bird’s (2022) Tell Tale, Reading, Writing, Remembering.

I really don’t understand people who don’t read.  I mean, I really don’t understand them.

Of course I try to, by reading about them.  One that comes to mind is a book by Steven Carroll, called The Gift of Speed. It’s No 2 in the Glenroy Series, and I read it when it was published, back in 2004.  It’s about an adolescent who’s obsessed by cricket and for the first time, I got an inkling of the kind of emotion that being interested in cricket might arouse.  Thinking of this book now, twenty years after I read it, I remember this boy toiling endlessly at practising his bowling.  That’s obsession, eh?

Books about obsession are always interesting. Auto-da-Fé (1935), by Nobel Laureate Elias Canetti (1905-1994) and translated by C.V. Wedgewood, has the usual cautionary message about keeping an obsession under control, with a professor who dissociates from the real world and hears no voice other than his own.  To quote from my review:

The professor goes for walks early in the morning before the bookshops open so that he won’t be tempted to buy any more – he already has a library of 25,000 books and anyway, the books in the bookshops are inferior and not worthy of him.

He himself was the owner of the most important private library in the whole of this great city. He carried a minute portion of it with him wherever he went. His passion for it, the only one which he had permitted himself during a life of austere and exacting study, moved him to take special precautions. Books, even bad ones, tempted him easily into making a purchase. Fortunately, the great number of the book shops did not open until after eight o’clock. (p11)

Something to bear in mind if the TBR is escaping its boundaries…

Sez she, who has no self-control whatsoever when it comes to the TBR.  A recent purchase which enticed me is Chloé, by Katrina Kell. Appealing to my love of art and Paris, this novel reimagines the life of Chloé the person, the model for the iconic painting at Young and Jackson’s hotel where it has been on display since 1909. Kell’s MS won the Australian Society of Authors Award Mentorship for an unpublished novel, and she was mentored by Linda Jaivin who wrote The Empress Lover (2014) so I’m expecting it to be interesting.

So, that’s my #6Degrees for this month!

Next month (May 2024), starts with The Anniversary by Stephanie Bishop.

Posted by: Lisa Hill | April 4, 2024

One Another (2024), by Gail Jones

I have had a mixed experience with the novels of Gail Jones, one of our most prominent authors.  I read her early work somewhat unenthusiastically with a book group, but liking her more recent novels has prompted me to explore her backlist, along with her latest releases.

I haven’t read (but have just bought a Kindle edition of) Jones’s debut novel Black Mirror (2002).  However, having come across a review of it in The Age, I am tempted to suggest that One Another revisits its theme.  Apparently Black Mirror is about an idealistic young Australian in London who has her romantic notions quashed by reality, and so too is One Another. Both protagonists are exploring the lives of cultural icons: Anna Griffin in Black Mirror is writing a biography of a (fictional) surrealist artist called Victoria Morrell, and in One Another, Helen Ross is in Cambridge to do a PhD on Joseph Conrad (1857-1924), the author of Heart of Darkness (1899), Lord Jim (1900) and Almayer’s Folly (1895, see my review).  In both of these novels, Jones explores the theme of disappointing intercultural experiences and landscapes. The restlessness that prompts Australians to travel in pursuit of their ambitions is still a preoccupation in these novels written more than two decades apart, and the disappointment when expectations aren’t realised is also a recurring theme in Jones’s most recent fiction. (Particularly in Salonika Burning. Who can forget Stella’s frustrations in that novel, eh?)

In One Another, the central character Helen has been conjuring Conrad since she first read his work as a teenager, her interest triggered by visiting the Tasmanian resting place of the remains of the Otago.  As you can see from my travel blog (where I like to record Bookish Moments) I was very excited to see it too:

… I went to the [Hobart] Maritime Museum and had an unexpected literary treat. There amongst all sorts of model ships and boats, bits of rope, knots and so forth, was a display about the three masted barque Otago, which was the ship commanded by Joseph Conrad in 1888-9.  He took command of this ship in Bangkok, sailed it to Sydney, Melbourne, Mauritius and Adelaide before resigning his command because the owners didn’t want him to sail it on to China. It was this journey that formed the basis of his writings about the South Seas, and it is therefore a very great pity that the remains of this ship are being left to rot at Otago Bay in Risden [where we later saw it in situ]. I got quite a thrill from being allowed to touch the hatch that has been salvaged from the ship and restored – Conrad must also have grasped it on his way down below decks!

So you can see how I relate to Helen — who isn’t able to explain her thesis to her parents back home, nor to anyone else — when she pretends to herself that she knew Conrad intimately, as if from the inside.

Some quality of her reading life puffed characters into people and writers into companions.  For years she subdued this instinct, but it returned and settled within her.  Not identification  — nothing so crass — but a flow into fiction’s otherness that welcomed and accommodated her.  Imagining the lives of characters was like imagining friends, those affectionate speculations, the sense of wishing to share in their feelings and witness their experiences.  And at times almost a delusion, when she wept at the end of a book for a person made up only of words. (p.9)

One Another is worth reading for that paragraph alone!

Along with Helen’s other disappointments at Cambridge, she — like Conrad who left his MS of Almayer’s Folly in a café —  has lost her manuscript, her thesis on ‘Joseph Conrad: Cryptomodernism* and Empire’.  She left it on a train.  (It’s 1992, so there isn’t a backup in The Cloud.)

It was not a serious manuscript, not a true biography, but fragments of a life intersected by literary-critical notations.  Helen consoled herself with the knowledge that it was unpublishable — too fanciful for the scholar, too scholarly for a general reader — so that by stages she reconciled to the idea of useless labour and pages never read.  In one vision she saw her manuscript flying out of a train window, lifting on the gush of slipstream, skittish and bright, a line of A4s twisting and fluttering in a zesty rise, like so many loosened kites.  In another she saw it stolen by a man in his fifties, bald, de-nationalised, with greasy fingers.  He chanced upon it and left smudgy fingerprints as he turned the pages, scowling. It was this version of loss that most alarmed her.  Better flying pages, hopelessly scattered in the wind, than a mean reader, censoring, and his intrusive grubby remarks.

She was a rationalist, she told herself, and able to renounce possession.  But still it stung.  To lose an entire manuscript, and all that work. (p.4)

Indeed.  Devastating, no matter how one might rationalise it…

Fragments of Helen’s thoughts about Conrad weave through the novel, and especially if you like Conrad, you’ll enjoy discovering new insights and some titles you haven’t read before, as well as correspondences between the character and the writer.  Like Conrad, Helen is an ‘outsider’… and not just in the insularity of Cambridge, but also at home in Tasmania, because she was born in Sydney.

The girls at school conceded she was clever, but she remained unpopular.  She would always be a ‘mainlander’ in this small community, one who came from somewhere that had little imaginative claim on her peers. ‘You have to be born here,’ one of the meaner girls announced, and since she could never repair her birthplace Helen accepted that she would eventually leave.  Her brothers played cricket and rugby league, and grew sarcastic.  They were acceptable migrants, already beefy and athletic, already invited to stay. (p.40)

Quite apart from her (wholly justifiable) doubts about her toxic boyfriend Justin —Helen’s experience of intellectual companionship at Cambridge is alienating too.  There are parallels again with Conrad, who, despite writing all his successful stories in English, was never accepted as ‘British’ because of his Polish accent and grammatical lapses. Helen’s Australian accent marks her out as an uncouth Australian, and she disappoints the one fellow-student who implicitly shared her political sympathies because Helen was unable to answers questions about convicts transported for political reasons. Anuradha’s thesis is about Chartism…

Helen had never heard of William Cuffay, son of a West Indian slave, transported for twenty-one years to Van Dieman’s Land as a political prisoner.  Anuradha was focusing her study in William Cuffay, and  Helen’s link to Tasmania excited and interested her.

How to explain that her self-fashioning demanded a rejection of home? Helen refused the dirty allure of convicts; she found too overwhelming the horror of frontier wars and the killing of Indigenous people.  She felt these were not her stories; she was distant; she was self-protecting and disengaged. (p.35)

The other students use their scholarship to diminish Helen’s:

One of the women at college quoted Nabokov with the hint of a sneer: Conrad had a souvenir-shop style, all bottled ships and the shell necklaces of romantic clichés; in mentality and emotions he was hopelessly juvenile.  Helen argued against such snobbery, but she was defensive and undermined.  Justin too thought her topic a waste of time, and with each visit to a pub — ‘fieldwork’, he called it, she saw his tendency to insult increase, as he became loud and slurry. (p.5)

Helen’s father’s death and a catastrophic event involving Justin combine to form the catalyst for her to abandon her PhD.  This means she has to move out of college, and earn some kind of income while she works out what to do.  In a dreary boarding house, she finds herself re-living life at home with her mother.  She is more than a bit lost, a highly intelligent young woman taking comfort in a mindless cleaning job and the order of supermarket layouts.  I won’t be the only reader whose heart aches for Helen.

Reading One Another — and ‘living’ the traumatic episodes of Helen’s life is an engrossing reading experience, one which mirrors Helen’s imaginative response to Conrad when she pretends that she knew him intimately…

* I have no idea what Cryptomodernism is.  When I Googled it, all I could find that seemed remotely relevant was a site about an artist called Doris Bittar and her bio talks about overlapping colonial heritages and identities within historical contexts. The patterns in her artworks refer to cultural DNA mutating in tandem with human migration and attached to codes of decorum that may facilitate unnavigable discourse.

Author: Gail Jones
Title: One Another
Publisher: Text Publishing, 2024
Cover design by W H Chong
ISBN: 9781922790644, pbk., 220 pages
Source: personal library, purchased from Benn’s Books Bentleigh, $34.99

Posted by: Lisa Hill | April 2, 2024

Shining Like the Sun (2024), by Stephen Orr

Stephen Orr (b.1967) is a national treasure IMO.  Over the course of his prolific career he has written novels, novellas, YA, short stories, non-fiction and plays which are quintessentially Australian and yet universal in their preoccupations.  His latest title Shining Like the Sun is not just a novel about an old man in a declining Australian town, it’s about depopulation of the countryside all over the world and a celebration of what matters about life in small towns: a sense of connection.

The title comes from Conjectures of a Guilty Bystander (1966) by Thomas Merton, quoted in an epigraph at the beginning of Orr’s novel.

In Louisville, at the corner of Fourth and Walnut, in the centre of the shopping district, I was suddenly overwhelmed with the realization that I loved all these people, that they were mine and I theirs, that we could not be alien to one another even though we were total strangers. It was like waking from a dream of separateness . . . This sense of liberation from an illusory difference was such a relief and such a joy to me that I almost laughed out loud. . . .

As if the sorrows and stupidities of the human condition could overwhelm me, now that I realize what we all are. And if only everybody could realise this! But it cannot be explained. There is no way of telling people that they are all walking around shining like the sun.

Stephen Orr shows that one way to tell them that is to write a novel that shows people ‘shining like the sun.’

Wilf Healy is eighty, and he lives in the back room of a pub in a small town called Selwyn, where he has taken on all the jobs that aren’t economically viable any more.  He delivers prescriptions for the chemist and the mail for the post office; he does a shift at the failing pub and he drives the school bus with its half-dozen passengers, along with trying to sell the school’s limp vegetable produce.  None of these jobs are full time, and some of them aren’t paid, not even petrol money for his ancient Morris.  These jobs have nothing to offer young people in secondary school who are already planning their escape.  Wilf would like to retire, but every time he raises the issue, it turns out to be all too hard for people who know that he will go on doing it indefinitely, because he cares.

What’s left of Wilf’s family after the death of his wife Nancy and his son Steven, consists of his niece Orla and her ne’er-do-well seventeen-year-old son Connor.  There’s a brother still alive, called Colin, but he took off for a brighter future decades ago and lives in the US.  He did not come home for any of the funerals.   So Wilf’s responsibilities also consist of caring for Orla who has a ‘blood disease’ and trying to get Connor back on track after he prematurely left school to become a ‘rock star’ writing his own songs.

There must be hundreds of Wilfs all over Australia and rural areas elsewhere…  we can see some of them in the sentimental ABC TV series Back Roads which always features some ‘character’ and a bunch of people holding down multiple roles to keep the town together.

Most of the narration is from Wilf’s perspective, alternating between his frustrated yearning to be free of it all and his satisfying interactions with the town.  Some of it is very funny, especially the scenes on the bus with Sienna who is permanently welded to her phone, and seven-year-old Luke who is aiming to follow in J K Rowling’s footsteps with a novel about a monster called Morpheus.  He reads successive chapters to Wilf.  It put me in mind of a more bloodthirsty version of Ted Hughes’ The Iron Man with a dash of vengeance thrown in:

‘On the way to Selwyn, Morpheus got hungry and ate all the sheep and cows, so by the time he arrived he was full.  But he continued anyway and found the kids in maths and ate them then had a few teachers. (p.63)

But there is also Trevor who is weedy and vulnerable and at the mercy of a low-life bully called Darcy — who gets away with his anti-social behaviour because the principal Noah is afraid of the mother who has given Darcy his sense of entitlement.

The one business that is thriving is the ice-cream shop, which has a handy sideline in selling drugs to teenagers.

Like a lot of old people, Wilf tries to appeal to Connor with reminiscences of the ‘good old days’ on Louth, an offshore island where he and his brothers grew up.  As the story progresses, we don’t just see that this goes down like the proverbial lead balloon with Connor, it’s also a fantasy.  Theirs was a hardscrabble life with a violent father and Wilf was not given the same opportunities, such as they were, as his brothers.  He had ambitions which he could never fulfil.  This is why he understands Connor’s dreams, does what he can to help him fulfil them, but is ultimately only too well aware of the pitfalls ahead of an undereducated adolescent.

One of Orr’s great strengths is his mastery of dialogue, but much of what drives the novel is unsaid.  When Connor’s father unexpectedly turns up, Connor doesn’t want to know him.

Wilf thought it a pity.  Dave offered some hope of a way forward.  But thinking about it that night, sitting on his bed next to Connor, he’d said, ‘You don’t reckon you should talk to him?  He’s still your father.’

‘No, he’s not.’ Not bothering to mention the absent years.

Wilf had said, ‘Some people do improve with age.’

‘How?’

‘They grow up, mature, learn a bit of responsibility.’

‘You think he has?’

‘I don’t know.  Perhaps.  He came today.  That must have been difficult.’

‘For him? Jesus, Uncle.’

Connor hadn’t mentioned the missed parent-teacher interviews, concerns about school, reports, friendships, bullying, loneliness, other dads watching their kids playing soccer, taking them places, holidays.  In the end he’d said, ‘Do you want me to list everything?’

‘No.’

‘Well, that’s why.  Because he could’ve, but he didn’t. So I don’t think he’s matured much, do you?’ (p.212)

But Wilf values connection.  He is the personification of what’s called corporate memory in business organisations, but is undervalued in communities.

Wilf fought with the gearbox he’d been cursing for decades.  He could fix it, but it worked, so why spend money you didn’t have?  He pulled out from Monk’s Lane, turned right and headed for the school.  A few kids (he could name them all, their parents, aunts and uncles) walked along the few inches of path that history had granted them.  Pants half down, cuffs dragging, no belt; and the tie they wore loose, like someone was about to garrotte them.  And the way they walked.  Dragging their feet. Like school didn’t matter.  The most important years of your life, he’d say to them helping them weed or fertilise. But they’d always look at him like he was a loaf of out-of-date bread, a lame plover, a mile marker that didn’t mean anything to anyone.  (p.10)

This week ABC News online ran an article about houses for sale in Sicily that can be bought for one euro.

Similar programs are being run throughout Italy, in small towns hopeful of attracting new residents to bolster dwindling populations.

It’s not just an Australian phenomenon…

I’ve done my time living in small towns, and I’m lucky that the small pocket of the suburbs where I live has the kind of community connection that Orr is celebrating in this novel.  But I don’t like to see the decline of rural towns being wrecked by the modern economy.  (That’s part of the reason why I like to patronise literary festivals in the regions.  The other reason is that their festivals are often better in many ways than the major ones in the cities.)

I checked out the policy of the so-called National Party on decentralisation. Well, they ‘stand for it’, they recognise that ‘unlocking that potential will require vision, planning and proactive management’ and they reckon they represent regional interests by ‘fighting for a fair share’ and acting as a counter to ‘city-centric views.’  Grand ambitions but surprisingly vague about specific policies, and even more surprisingly nothing at all about any achievements in this space.  If that’s the party that claims to represent regional Australia and always has a place at the table when the Coalition is in power, it’s no wonder the depopulation of the regions continues unabated.

And when you read a novel such as Shining Like the Sun, you can see what a loss that is.


You can read my reviews of Stephen’s other books here.  Nearly all of them are still available at the Wakefield Press website, where you can also buy them as eBooks. (You’ll need to type Stephen Orr into the search box on the top of their home page.)

Author: Stephen Orr
Title: Shining Like the Sun
Publisher: Wakefield Press, 2024
Cover design by Duncan Blachford
ISBN: 9781923042278, pbk., 313 pages
Review copy courtesy of Wakefield Press.

I’ve had The People Immortal on the TBR since it was first published in translation in 2022, but I only got round to reading it now because, thinking it was a new title by Grossman, I borrowed the library copy that was on display… before realising that I had borrowed a book that I’ve already got…

(Conversely, I borrowed a library copy of Gail Jones’ new novel One Another and was about half way through when I realised I had to have my own copy, and I bought it this week at Benn’s Bookshop where I met up for the first time with Jennifer from Tasmanian Bibliophile at Large.)

It’s difficult to write about novels of war at this time.  There is a proxy war of attrition between the US and Russia, and there is asymmetrical warfare in the Middle East, both of these wars causing suffering on all sides, and neither of them are being objectively reported by independent war correspondentsThe People Immortal is to some extent a work of propaganda too, although unlike the journalists reporting on the current conflicts, Grossman was ‘on the ground’ reporting for the Red Star, and he spoke the lingua franca of the soldiers among whom he travelled. And although there were constraints on what he could publish, he wrote about the realities of war, with tenderness and clarity emerging from his first hand experience among ordinary people.

(Soviet war correspondents were not the only ones constrained by wartime censorship.  John Steinbeck’s brilliant Once There was a War begins with a piece written from a troopship travelling to an unknown destination, which we now know was heading for the D-day landings. But Steinbeck did not have to fear his political leaders in the way that Grossman did, see my review of An Armenian Sketchbook.)

FWIW the bestselling (i.e. populist) British historian Antony Beevor has a very high opinion of Grossman’s war reportage.  He has even edited a translation by Dr. Lyubov Vinogradov of Grossman’s A Writer at War: Vasily Grossman with the Red Army 1941–1945.  The blurb at Goodreads describes it as a vivid eyewitness account of the Eastern Front and ‘the ruthless truth of war.’

The ‘ruthless truth’ was that in 1941, a poorly prepared Russia was reeling from Hitler’s breach of the Molotov-Ribbentrop non-aggression pact.  You only have to watch a couple of episodes of the documentary Soviet Storm on YouTube with its helpful maps to see how rapidly the German invasion over-ran the Soviets, occupying vast swathes of Soviet territory all the way to the outskirts of Moscow.  (The post-Soviet Russian-made Soviet Storm is also a work of propaganda, but it’s a useful corrective to the Cold War propaganda that WW2 was won on D-Day.  It acknowledges the catastrophic losses and the suffering, and it also identifies Stalin’s purges of military leaders and disastrous decisions by the Stavka, and acknowledges Lend Lease and other allied contributions.)

Grossman’s novel, published in the early stages of the war, is about a group of soldiers who were part of the thousands trapped in a massive German encirclement, summarised in the blurb like this:

Set during the catastrophic first months of the German invasion of the Soviet Union, this is the tale of an army battalion dispatched to slow the advancing enemy at any cost, with encirclement and annihilation its promised end.

Writing even at this early stage of the war, Grossman saw the scale of the conflict:

In vain do poets make out in song that the names of the dead will live forever.  In vain do they write poems assuring dead heroes that they continue to live, that their memory and names are eternal.  In vain do thoughtless writers make such claims in their books, promising what no soldier would ever ask them to promise.  Human memory simply cannot hold thousands of names.  He who is dead is dead.  Those who go to their death understand this.  A nation of millions is now going out to die for its freedom, just as it used to go out to work in field and factory. (p.150)

If you listen to Antony Beevor on You Tube, you can get the impression that Red Army soldiers fought on against appalling odds only because they feared being shot by their own side for cowardice (a penalty that was also a potential consequence for desertion amongst the other allies.)  It is a very uncomfortable truth that the world owes its reprieve from global fascism in part to a totalitarian monster like Stalin.  But his brutal directives do not mean we should negate the love of country of ordinary Soviet soldiers and civilians who came from all over the USSR to defend it. Nor should we diminish the indefatigable courage that inflicted the first defeat on the German army when they failed to take Moscow and went on to force it to surrender at Stalingrad and then fight doggedly to the war’s conclusion in Berlin.

Grossman’s novels remind us that this war was not about political leaders who we might properly despise.  It was about people.  As I wrote in my review of Svetlana Alexievich’s (post Soviet) The Unwomanly Face of War, even the women — some of them as young as sixteen and only five feet tall — felt the call to protect their homeland.  The People Immortal demonstrates what is also clear in the Soviet Storm documentary: ordinary people witnessing German atrocities in cities, towns, and villages, soon realised that Hitler’s war was an existential threat. The novel opens in Gomel, (in today’s Belarus) where Grossman had witnessed the future if the Germans won.  Wikipedia tells us that 80% of the city was destroyed, and the population was decimated, from 144,000 in 1940 to less than 15,000.

It wasn’t just a scorched earth policy, it was the destruction of a people.  Hitler’s intention was to enslave the people who might be useful, and to destroy the rest so that the land could be used for German expansion.  Leningrad (now St Petersburg), one of the most beautiful cities in Europe, was to be utterly destroyed, and the siege to starve its people into surrender began in September 1941 and wasn’t lifted until liberated by the Soviets in January 1944.  Grossman’s novel fictionalises (with characters drawn from real-life observations in his notebook) the desperate struggle to hold back the advance and to break out of encirclement.

The main characters in the troop are the Commander Babadjanian; Bogariov, formerly an academic but now a commissar; his superior officer Cherednichenko; and an ordinary soldier, the irrepressible Ignatiev. Grossman alludes to the retreat through the prism of the people left behind:

Bogariov waved at the children and felt a chill pass through his heart.  For him, there was always something bitter-sweet about the sight of village children saying farewell to the Red Army as it retreated. (p.25)

Old men, women and children in villages and hamlets wave the retreating soldiers on their way, offering them curd cheese, pies, cucumbers and glasses of milk.  The old women weep and weep, searching amid thousands of grim, dusty, exhausted faces for the face of a son.  And they hold out the little white bundles with their gifts of food, ‘Take this, love. You are all my own sons.  Every one of you has a place in my heart. (p.27)

He has no illusions about the enemy:

Hordes of Germans are advancing from the west.  Their tanks are daubed with antlered deer heads, with green and red dragons, with wolf maws and fox tails, with skulls and crossbones.  Every German soldier has in his pocket photographs of conquered Paris, devastated Warsaw, shameful Verdun, burned-down Belgrade and occupied Brussels, Amsterdam, Oslo, Narvik, Athens and Gdynia. (p. 28)

Those soldiers are confident of Nazi Germany’s greatness and invincibility.

They defeated Denmark in half a day, Poland in seventeen days, France in thirty-five days, Greece in eight days and Holland in five — and they are in no doubt that within seventy days they can reduce Ukraine, Belorussia and Russia to slavery. (p.28)

Indeed, they were so confident, that German prisoners who were almost suffocating in the fierce August sun, were clearly astonished when Battalion Commissar Bogariov questioned them about their quartermasters’ supplies of winter uniforms. They expected their conquest to be so swift that they would not need winter uniforms.

On the Soviet maps, the heavy blue arrow pointing deep into the body of the Soviet lands, seemed to the colonel terrible, swift and indefatigable.  But Yeromin, the Commander-in-Chief, is unbowed.  He knows about the reserve troops and rearguard formations being brought forward. And he knows the terrain, the land over which battle must be fought.

He had an excellent sense of the contours of battles, a physical awareness of the folds of the terrain, the unsteadiness of the Germans’ pontoon bridges, the depth of the fast-flowing streams and the precarious sponginess of the bogs where he would meet the German tanks.  (p.40)

Tolstoy was always conscious that historians are wise after the event while the participants don’t/can’t know what’s really going on.   In War and Peace (1869, see my review) Pierre muses as Napoleon advances that the military decision-makers in Moscow were useless, while those who were actually on the ground were oblivious to the bigger picture.  Grossman, in the thick of it, was perhaps reminding Stalin about this fundamental truth of war when he carefully inserted occasional oblique criticisms of orders being made by the Stavka, miles away from the action. He doesn’t mention it by name…

His war — unlike that of the HQ and operations department staff — was not being fought only on the grid of a map. He fought on Russian soil, with its forests, its morning mists, its uncertain twilight, its fields of tall wheat and dense uncut hemp, its haystacks and granaries, its small villages on steep riverbanks, its deep ravines overgrown with scrub.  He could feel the length of main roads and winding back roads; he had a physical sense of the dust, of the winds and rains, of small blown-up railway halts and the torn-up track at important junctions.  And the blue arrow with its point like a fishhook did not alarm him.  He was a cool-headed general who knew and loved his country, who loved to fight and knew how to fight.  He wanted only one thing — to take the offensive.  But he was retreating, and this was a source of torment to him.  (p.40)

Writing even as Soviet troops retreated from the initial onslaught, and knowing nothing of the scale of German atrocities that were yet to be revealed to the world, Grossman foresaw retribution and contempt for their inhumanity.

The day will come when the court of great nations will sit in judgement; when the sun will shine down in disgust on Hitler’s fox-like face, on his narrow forehead and sunken temples, while a man with fat, sagging cheeks, the boss of the Fascist air force, squirms beside him on the bench of shame. (p.60)

A hundred years from today, historians will examine with horror the orders that the German High Command drew up so calmly and methodically, with true Germanic precision, and issued to the commanders of air force wings and squadrons.  Who wrote these orders? Wild beasts? Lunatics? (p.61)

Thinking of all the conflicts that have taken place in my lifetime, the coda to these rhetorical questions still resonates today.

There is no punishment or retribution that would atone for even a thousandth part of the guilt of those who issued these orders, or a tenth part of the guilt of those who carried them out.  Comrades, no such punishment exists, or even can exist. (p.61)

This is followed by a graphic description of the air raid that destroyed an ancient sleeping city which we know from the translators’ notes refers to the fire-bombing of Gomel which Grossman had witnessed.

Ukraine had suffered the Holodomor under Stalin, a man-made famine from 1932 to 1933 that killed millions of Ukrainians, and there were those who thought they’d be better off supporting Hitler.  Grossman epitomised this in the character of Kotenko, who welcomes the Nazis in the belief that his former wealth and possessions will be restored to him.  But his village like hundreds of others in Ukraine was plundered and then razed to the ground:

‘My stables,’ [Kotenko] said aloud, examining their blackened remains — the broken posts and jutting out beams and rafters.  He went on towards the apiary, but even from a distance he could make out the wrecked, overturned hives and hear the tense, angry buzz of the bees; it was as if they were keeping guard over the body of the young beekeeper lying under the ash tree. ‘My hives,’ he said, ‘my hives.’ And there he stood for a while, looking at the dark mass hovering over the dead body.  Next he went to look at the collective-farm orchard.  Not a single apple, not a single pear was left on the branches.  The soldiers were sawing away at the trees and hacking at them with axes, cursing the stubborn, fibrous trunks.  ‘Pear and cherry are hard to chop,’ he thought. ‘Nothing harder.  They have a twisted grain.’

Field kitchens in the collective-farm orchard were smoking and steaming.  Cooks were plucking geese, shaving the bristles off newly slaughtered young boars, and peeling potatoes, carrots and beetroots from the vegetable garden. Hundreds of soldiers were lying or sitting under the trees, chewing and chomping away, smacking their lips, swallowing down the juice of Antonovka apples and tender, juicy pears. (p.113)

This sensitivity to the love of the land and its desecration (quoted in this review at the Jewish Chronicle) is the spur to fight on against the odds.  It’s impossible to read The People Immortal without feeling intensely moved.

There is also a fine review at The Modern Novel. 


I won’t host opinions or discussion about current conflicts in response to this review.
So I’ll remind readers of my position as stated shortly after October 7th 2023
on my review of Lucy Caldwell’s These Days:

Australia’s head of ASIO Mike Burgess has asked Australians to safeguard social cohesion amid bloodshed in the current situation, warning that inflammatory remarks may fuel community tensions. He asked that ‘all parties consider the implications for social cohesion’ because ‘words matter’.  (The Guardian, 12/10/23)

I have taken this advice into consideration in writing this review, of a book about a war from last century, because — though the geopolitics are very different — the parallels are so obvious.

FWIW my thoughts here are not an opportunity for anyone to comment on current events, to comment on one ‘side’ or the other, or to assume that it is being complicit not to comment on one ‘side’ or the other, or even to make whataboutery assumptions about which war is troubling me.  There has been war in Europe for over a year, there are always wars going on all over Africa and the Middle East and the effects of all of them on ordinary people trouble me.

We can have opinions without expressing them in public
where they may do harm.

Author: Vasily Grossman
Title: The People Immortal (Народ бессмертен)
Translated from the Russian by Elizabeth Chandler and Robert Chandler
Original Russian text edited by Julia Volohova
Introduction and Afterword by Robert Chandler and Julia Volohova
Publisher: Maclehose Press, Quercus, London, 2020
ISBN: 9781529414745, pbk., 350 pages with  lists of places named and characters, an Introduction and an Afterword, a timeline, reproductions of texts, explanatory notes, endnotes to the text, suggestions for further reading, acknowledgements and biographical notes, but, alas, it doesn’t have a map!. The actual story is 226 pages.
Source: Personal copy, purchased from The Avenue Bookshop in Glenhuntly Rd Caulfield.

Image credit: Once There Was a War cover image, from http://search.abaa.org/dbp2/book1602_025002.html, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=19559954

Posted by: Lisa Hill | March 26, 2024

Skull Water (2023), by Heinz Insu Fenkl

Reading this novel gave me a lesson in reading between the lines of a review.  At the Asian Review of Books, where I encountered an enticing review by Susan Blumberg-Kason of Nguyễn Phan Quế Mai’s Dust Child (see my review), there was also a review of a book on a similar theme of bi-racial children fathered by American soldiers: Skull Water by Heinz Insu Fenkl.  Both reviews are basically summaries, but it concludes with:

Skull Water takes more of a nostalgic look at an unusual childhood, while Dust Child shows how trauma can persist over decades until people seek to find any semblance of closure, if possible.

Well, yes, it certainly was an ‘unusual’ childhood.  Much of Skull Water is very unpleasant indeed.

The main character Insu has the same name as the author so presumably we are meant to infer that much of this coming-of-age story is autobiographical.  The story, presented in two time frames — 1950 during the hot war, and 1975 in the Cold War aftermath — is about the bi-racial adolescent son of an American soldier and his Korean wife, called Mahmi in the novel.  Insu goes on a quest to help Big Uncle recover from a festering foot injury which dates from his backstory in the 1950s.  There is a Korean legend that drinking water from a decomposed skull will cure diseases, and together with other bi-racial adolescents, he sets out to desecrate the grave of an old man who has recently died…

That scene alone is unpleasant enough, but the narrative is punctuated by other scenes of adolescent hooliganism, foul-mouthed conversations, a cock-fight and a dog-fight.  (I skipped that chapter entirely).  These young people in their mid-teens are mostly alienated from the local culture and hang around on the edges of the military base, smoking dope and drinking alcohol in clubs and bars, and engaging at some risk in black marketeering (as their Korean parents do, at considerable risk from their much nastier contacts).  Two of these young people provide sexual favours to the soldiers: Patsy is a cynical young prostitute intent on getting a ticket to America as a wife, while Paulie is luckier in that his paramour has good intentions, at least, of continuing the relationship in the US.

Insu, who is portrayed as more sensitive than the others, eavesdrops on conversations at home and despite his western education from a previous posting in Germany, has an ambivalent attitude towards superstition.  So he believes the legend about skull water, and he also believes to some extent in ghosts.

Given the explicitly crude language in so much of this book, perhaps I shouldn’t have been surprised, but I was, by the use of the N-word to describe African-American soldiers.  I suppose it was authentic, in context, and intended to acknowledge the racism of the US military in that era, but still, it is offensive.

I finished the book unclear about whether the nostalgic tone meant that the author thought the events portrayed were ok — or forgiveable, at least, because the characters were young; or that they were intended to show the harmful effects of young people growing up in the bizarre environment of a military camp; or that bi-racial kids are vulnerable to acting out because they are rejected by others.  The occasional dash of Buddhist philosophy didn’t suggest to me that the protagonist had really matured enough to reflect on his actions and reconsider his behaviour.


Given that there must have been relationships between locals and Australian soldiers participating in military ventures (from the Boer War onwards)  — there’s an Australian version of these stories about bi-racial children of soldiers waiting to be told.  I’d want it to be authentic, but I’d want it to be better than this one.

I consider myself lucky that the Kindle edition available to me in Australia was priced at $47.02.  I might have bought it if the price had not been so outrageous.  Instead I located a digital copy at the Port Phillip Library, and was able to read it using a Library App called Libby. (I didn’t actually use the App because I am never going to read a book on my phone, but I was able to read it on the large screen of my desktop even though it’s a pain to read a whole book sitting at my desk.)

Author: Heinz Insu Fenkl
Title: Skull Water
Publisher: Spiegel & Grau, 2023
Cover design: Strick & Williams, illustration by Carson Ellis
ASIN: B09RSRH4HM, digital edition, read using Libby.
Source: Port Phillip Library,

Posted by: Lisa Hill | March 25, 2024

Crooked Seeds (2024) by Karen Jennings

Karen Jennings achieves something quite remarkable in the harrowing opening pages of Crooked Seeds.  The novel begins by introducing its central character Deirdre van Deventer living in unbelievably squalid conditions in Cape Town, South Africa.  Everything in her dingy apartment is dirty and smelly, including her, the details rendered in distasteful detail.  I suspect that most readers would judge her harshly.

And then the reader’s perspective about this woman is reversed, evoking a sense of profound pity along with a sense of apprehension that the same circumstances could conceivably happen to any of us.  It is revealed that this is what it’s like during the water crisis in Cape Town in an entirely possible future. Or in many cities around the world with increasingly unreliable rainfall.

After good rains in 2013 and 2014, the City of Cape Town began experiencing a drought in 2015, the first of three consecutive years of dry winters brought on possibly by the El Niño weather pattern and perhaps by climate change. Water levels in the City’s dams declined from 71.9 percent in 2014 to 50.1 percent in 2015. (Wikipedia, Cape Town Water Crisis, viewed 25/3/24)

Over the course of 2016 water restrictions were lifted from Level 1 to Level 3, and by 2018 Level 6 (87 litres per person per day) rose to Level 6B (50 litres per person per day).  There were plans to police the water distribution points across the city when Day Zero was declared, i.e. when the dam levels reached only 13.5 percent.  On that day the water supply would be shut off except for its use in hospitals and the CBD, and residents would have to rely on 149 water collection points around the City to collect a daily ration of 25 litres of water per person.  And this of course would affect the economy because employees would have to queue for water.  It’s not hard to imagine the kind of chaos and civil disorder that might ensue.

(Cape Town, a city of 4 million people, had no desalination plant.  Two were hastily built, but were decommissioned two years later. So — while they had a reprieve with good rains just in time to stave off Day Zero — they still don’t have a secure and reliable water supply.)

So when Deirdre wakes up with a raging thirst, it’s not a problem easily resolved.  Deirdre doesn’t have water to wash herself, or her clothes, or her bedding, or her crockery, cutlery and cooking pans, or to keep her place clean.  So resiling from  that hasty condemnation, the reader feels pity for this woman, especially because she’s disabled and finds it hard to queue for water on crutches.

But then the author engineers another reversal in the reader’s construction of events… all in the space of a few pages of sparse prose.

Such a crisis demands that people work cooperatively for the public good in order to prevent disaster.  But another seesaw of opinion occurs when Deirdre is revealed as a thoroughly selfish, lazy, ungrateful woman with a foul mouth who won’t do anything to help herself or anyone else.  What’s more, she’s a White South African who is still ordering around People of Colour, to get things for her, to cadge drink and cigarettes from, to carry her stuff, to drive her to places and to listen to her self-pitying complaints.  Her sense of entitlement is still in fine shape, and she is deeply resentful about the change in her privileged status in post-apartheid South Africa. Even her own daughter has abandoned her and gone to England for a better future.

(There is an odd aspect to the existence of this daughter, but I can’t raise it without spoilers, sorry.)

Into this messy situation and compounding Deirdre’s sense of resentment comes an intrusion from the past.  The van Deventer family home has been requisitioned by the government because it was built on an aquifer.  But the earthworks have uncovered the remains of several bodies.  Babies’ bodies.  And Deirdre — whose sole preoccupation has been herself ever since she was maimed in an explosion that destroyed that house — is resistant to police enquiries about her brother who disappeared long ago after involvement with a pro-apartheid terrorist group.  Her refusal to engage in interrogating the past is in direct conflict with the idealism of South Africa’s Truth and Justice Commission, set up to bring South Africans together after the violence and human rights abuses perpetrated by all sides. Deirdre is determined to isolate herself from the society in which she lives.  (And on which she depends for welfare support).

What are we to make of this bleak, shattering novel?

Longlisted for the Booker, Jennings’ previous novel, An Island, (2020, see my review) was a sophisticated allegory for the impacts of colonialism on individuals.  It featured a man who is neither good nor bad, but like most of us, is flawed in an ordinary sort of way and isn’t really equipped for the dilemma which confronts him.  But Crooked Seeds is less generously crafted and the purposes of its characterisation are less clear.  Deirdre is, unequivocally, an awful person.  She is dirty, crude, selfish and exploitative, while the People of Colour (police, neighbours, retail staff) are unfailingly clean, polite, generous and helpful.  It is all too easy to judge her because she has no redeeming features.  All that is evoked is a limited amount of pity for her circumstances, which wanes as the story progresses. What is she meant to represent other than a person who has failed to adapt to the new reality?

And while the high-handed acquisition of the van Deventer property without adequate housing or compensation afterwards is some acknowledgement that post apartheid South Africa is becoming a failed state with authoritarian tendencies, this is only a minor thread when compared to government incompetence in securing a water supply for the city.  What is not addressed in the novel is that the New South Africa is a democracy which offers its people the opportunity to chuck out incompetent governments, but the ANC has dominated post-apartheid politics long past its use-by date.

It is only at the end of Crooked Seeds that its epigraph made sense to me:

For this is action, this not being sure, this careless
Preparing, sowing the sees crooked in the furrow,
Making ready to forget, and always coming back
To the mooring of starting out, that day so long ago.

from ‘Soonest Mended; from The Double Dream of Spring, by John Ashberry.

Author: Karen Jennings
Title: Crooked Seeds
Publisher: Text Publishing, Melbourne 2024
Cover design by Donna Cheng & Cassie Gonzales
ISBN: 9781922790675, pbk., 219 pages
Review copy courtesy of Text Publishing

Posted by: Lisa Hill | March 21, 2024

Dust Child (2023), by Nguyễn Phan Quế Mai

Thanks to Chris Gordon, community engagement and program manager at Readings Bookstore, this is the second novel I’ve come across by a Vietnamese author who actually lives in Vietnam.  During the pandemic, Chris coordinated numerous author events, and in October 2020 I blogged here, about Nguyen Phan Que Mai in conversation with Canadian author Natalie Jenner and the launch of her 2020 debut novel The Mountains Sing, which I subsequently reviewed here.  It was a rewarding book, revealing aspects of Vietnamese history that are little-known in the West, and depicting the impact of the war on women and their families.  Dust Child (2023) is Que Mai’s second novel, about the children of American servicemen searching for their parents.

I have been to Vietnam and seen for myself the astonishing economic progress they have made despite the vindictive three-decade American embargo on trade which made Vietnam one of the poorest nations on earth. So I was mildly disappointed that this novel goes out of its way to depict corruption and fraud, with Vietnamese people preying on each other.  There is corruption, as we know (and I’ve witnessed it myself in a restaurant in Ho Chi Minh (Saigon) city).  But the plot revolves around sisters Trang and Quynh manipulated into working as bar girls (i.e. prostitutes) because their parents are in massive debt to swindling money-lenders, and there is an orphaned Amerasian called Phong preyed upon by a Vietnamese family pressuring him into ‘adoption’ so that they can migrate to the US under his entitlement.  Because his appearance makes it obvious that he has an African-American father, Vietnamese women also wanting to migrate to the US claim to be his mother, for whom he has yearned all his life.  The emotional roller-coaster of hopes dashed time and again is a cruel reminder that the Vietnamese themselves discriminate against the children of US servicemen, hence the term ‘children of the dust’.

In a somewhat idealised portrait of a rueful US serviceman, Dan comes ‘on holiday’ to Vietnam with his wife Linda, who, despite his persisting PTSD, has been loyal to him since before his war service.  Naïvely, Dan believes that he can track down his lover ‘Kim’ without Linda finding out about their relationship and the pregnancy which he refused to acknowledge.  Wracked with guilt, Dan makes a lot of belated apologies and acknowledges that he was cruel and irresponsible, but he also makes the excuse that the war was very difficult for very young men… who turned to Vietnamese girls for comfort.  He too is preyed upon by a tour guide (with other murky enterprises on the side) who is eventually unmasked to reveal his hostility towards the GIs returning to Vietnam to exorcise their demons.

The story is told in three alternating narratives in two timeframes, 1969-70 and 2016.  It’s written in 3rd person, from Dan’s perspective; from Phong’s and from Trang’s, the elder of the two sisters.  The transitions from time period and narrative perspective were occasionally confusing and sometimes I lost track of who the minor characters were, particularly when their back stories weren’t revealed until later in the novel.  Occasionally explanations are a bit heavy-handed for the generation that knew at the time, for example, about the effects of Agent Orange and the defoliation of Vietnam’s environment (and were bitterly opposed to its use,) but I suppose younger readers for whom this is history need these explanations.

But overall, Dust Child is an important contribution to war fiction.  The issue of biracial children with GI fathers and Asian mothers is not confined to Vietnam… the review at The Asian Review of Books also mentions a novel called Skull Water by Heinz Insu Fenkl who writes from his own experience as the child of a German American GI father and a Korean mother.  I’m chasing up a copy from one of my libraries, though I have a bad feeling that it might only be available as an eBook, and I have never had any luck with the App that’s supposed to enable access.  So, we’ll see what comes of my quest.

To find out more about this remarkable and her achievements as an activist, see her About page on her website.

Author: Nguyễn Phan Quế Mai
Title: Dust Child
Publisher: One World, 2023
ISBN: 9780861546121, , pbk., 339 pages
Source: Personal library, purchased from Ulysses Bookstore Hampton, $32.99

Other reviews

Please note: I have used Vietnamese naming conventions (family name first) and the diacritics for the title of this post but for tags, categories and the text of this review I have mostly removed the diacritics because WordPress software doesn’t recognise them and they mess up the alphabetical order in categories.

Posted by: Lisa Hill | March 19, 2024

Edith’s Blake’s War (2021), by Krista Vane-Tempest

Edith Blake’s War is another book that came to my attention via the Sandringham Library Book Chatters.  It’s the story of the only Australian nurse killed in action during WW1.

TBH, I wasn’t expecting it to be as good as it was.  I am wary of Family History turned into a book because most of what I’ve come across has been boring, badly written, too long for itself and of interest only to the family and sometimes not even them.  But although the author of Edith Blake’s War Krista Vane-Tempest worked as a lawyer before starting to write, she had also studied English, history and politics at the ANU and she has brought all the skills of a professional historian to bear on her great-aunt’s story.

This is the book’s description:

In the early hours of 26 February 1918, the British hospital ship Glenart Castlesteamed into the Bristol Channel, heading for France to pick up wounded men from the killing fields of the Western Front. On board was a 32-year-old Australian nurse, Edith Blake.  Unbeknown to the ship’s company, a German U-boat lurked in the waters below.

When Edith Blake missed out on joining the Australian Army, she was one of 130 Australian nurses allotted to the British Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service in early 1915. Her first posting was in Cairo where she nursed soldiers wounded at Gallipoli. In Edith’s remarkable letters to her family back home, she shares her homesickness and frustration with military rules, along with the savagery of the injuries she witnessed in the operating theatre. Later, at Belmont War Hospital in Surrey, she writes of her conflicted feelings about nursing German prisoners of war even as battles on the Western Front raged and German aircraft bombed England.

In Edith Blake’s War, her great niece, Krista Vane-Tempest, traces Edith’s gripping story, from training in Sydney to her war service in the Middle East, England, and the Mediterranean, and her tragic death in waters where Germany had promised the safe passage of hospital ships.

HMHS Glenart Castle in her hospital ship colours (Wikipedia)

I could see from the Bibliography at the back that Vane-Tempest had, like me, read the award-winning Kitty’s War by Janet Butler. It’s not just another biography about an Australian nurse in WW1.  It’s a book that teaches its readers about historical method and how letters and diaries of sentimental value to families can reveal much more than first meets the eye.  Noticing what’s not in a diary or letter and comparing them with other contemporaneous records can reveal self-censorship and offer a valuable insight into the social and emotional pressures of the time.  To quote my own review, Kitty’s War also showed that sometimes a war diary is not much about war at all, but rather about changes in identity because of the war.

Until 2011 Vane-Tempest had thought that her great-aunt’s 1915 diary was the only surviving relic of Edith’s war years, but then there was the discovery in 2011 of a bundle of 138 letters stashed away in a bag in the bottom of her father’s wardrobe, passed onto him by an uncle.

We hadn’t known they existed.  Her youngest sister had been their loving, silent, sole custodian for decades.

The letters were separated into three thick bundles tied with string: one each for 1915, 1916, and 1917-18.  Many ran to four or five sheets, secured by a rusty pin.  The paper had browned and mottled with age, the edges were somewhat ragged, but in faded ink flowing over hundreds of pages and about 100 000 words, Edith Blake had chronicled her war service.  She wrote home almost every week to ‘Dear Mum, Dad, Grace and Queen.’ (p.xi, ‘Queen’ was the nickname of her sister Alice.)

Through these letters and the diaries, Edie’s voice comes through clearly.  She was a strong-willed and confident woman, intensely proud of the professionalism of the nurses from the Coast Hospital where she trained in Sydney, and determined to do her duty in whatever circumstances she found herself.  She is frank and forthright in her opinions, (and Vane-Tempest doesn’t shrink from including some racist opinions from Edie’s time in the Middle East) but both in her diary and her letters to family at home, like Kitty McNaughton, she tries to spare her family the anxiety that she knows they must be feeling. So while it’s clear that she’s nursing men with terrible injuries, she doesn’t go into detail about the horrors she saw.  When Germany’s aerial bombardment of cities brought for the first time danger to civilians from the skies and to medical staff from U-boats in the waters below, she reports on these atrocities as if they were remote and her own personal safety was not at any risk.

In all the books I’ve read about WW1, I’ve never come across such a clear picture of food shortages in Britain during this war. In the chapter ‘The Food Question is a Serious One Now’ we read that in 1917 Aunt Fanny in Sydney is sending food parcels to her POW son in Germany, while for Edie at Belmont the hospital’s main concern was to get the men healthy enough to move onto a POW camp…

… but sufficient nutrition came at a cost.  Prisoners were expensive to house, clothe and feed, and Britain and Germany were both starting to struggle to feed their own citizens and armies, let alone their prisoners. (p.230)

Edie was indignant to read in the press about two escapees  who as POWs in Germany had been fed only a slice of bread, some beets and two cups of coffee a day.  Unaware that Germans were dying of starvation during the ‘turnip winter’ of 1916-17  she reacted initially by wanting to starve her German patients, but this was short-lived.  Although she was often ambivalent about nursing the enemy, she always saw them as human beings in need of her care.  She knew these patients were not getting the nutrition they needed, but the food shortage in Britain was acute too. The harvest was poor in 1916, and though golf courses and cricket fields were turned over for crops, and children were taken out of school to help on farms because of the labour shortage, rationing was severe.  For Edie, writing home to Australia where her sister had been to La Perouse and had six pieces of toast, the contrast was painful. ‘That would be a crime here,‘ she wrote.  ‘Everywhere you go, you read, ‘Eat less bread’.  She has to supplement her allowance of tea and sugar by buying it, often foregoing a ‘cuppa’ because there was no sugar to have with it.  Today, jolly photos of schoolgirls growing their own at the Imperial War Museum website give no hint of the privations experienced by the belligerent nations.

In the chapter ‘Murder in My Heart’ I learned about the aerial bombardment of Britain in WW1.  Edie’s account is quite different from the detached tone of the article at Wikipedia:

Although the German strategic bombing campaign against Britain was the most extensive of the war, it was largely ineffective, in terms of actual damage done. Only 300 tons of bombs were dropped, resulting in material damage of £2,962,111 damage, 1,414 dead and 3,416 injured, these figures including those due to shrapnel from the anti-aircraft fire. (Wikipedia, Strategic bombing during WW1, viewed 19/3/24)

Vane-Tempest tells us that the arrival of heavy bombers called Gothas and the introduction of daylight raids was so unexpected that people did not run for shelter because they did not realise the danger they were in. 

Some people thought the aircraft were friendly, because it was daylight, and the Germans had only ever attacked at night. Until now.  At 11.25 am, the Gothas’ bellies split open, and bombs rained down on the East End,  It was the dawn of a new era. (p.238)

Edie wrote to her parents about the dreadful air raids but is careful to distance herself from the danger.

This morning a Scotch sister & I went to Croydon just to see what it is like.  We went into a shop & on coming out we saw lots of people looking up & when I got out we saw a horde of German aeroplanes, between 30 & 40 it looked. They were like black specks in the sky.  They were making for London.  On our journey back to Belmont we heard that many bombs had fallen & that the P. Office was in flames, part of Piccadilly and the Strand.

We knew many people must be killed & Oh Dear! & to think I have to nurse these people.  I never before felt it, but if I had been near them at that moment I would have killed them, for I had murder in my heart.  But Dear me! There I am on duty forgotten [sic] all about the bitter feeling I had towards them. We are waiting now for news of damage done for more raiders came over than was ever sent before.  I wonder how many came down in flames.  (7 July 1917, p.239-240)

Keeping the tone light, she even pens a jingle from a cartoon that she reproduces in her letter:

Fifteen little gothers
All in a line
The RNAS spotted them
& then there were ‘nein’. (p.245. RNAS=Royal Naval Air Service)

She tells them about watching the air battles in the distance with our planes making a really wonderful display of fireworks.  I wouldn’t have missed the sight for anything.  And even when she admits that it is the shrapnel from the anti-aircraft guns that causes casualties because people run out into the streets, she is careful to make it clear that she has not experienced it herself:

I believe that during a raid the rattle of the Guns & shrapnel, the bombs, the women & children screaming, the dogs barking, the fire engines racing through the streets, the continual hooting, causes a fearful pandemonium.  We here in Belmont only hear the guns & hooters & that is bad enough.  No wonder Londoners want reprisals & now they are to get them. (p.247)

Edie’s strong and capable voice never falters in this account, so it is hard to read the final chapters leading up to her death.  She had been nursing on the hospital ship for some months and was en route to France when a U-boat sank the ship even though it was clearly marked.  Of 182 people on board the Glenart Castle, 153 died, including all the nine women: Matron Beaufoy, her seven nurses and a stewardess.

Chief Cook Burton, one of the few to be rescued, told the Sheffield Daily Telegraph that he…

…saw the nine nurses [sic] on deck, but did not know what became of them… Another survivor stated that nine of the ship’s lifeboats got away altogether, but whether nine nurses were in one of them is not known.  When the vessel went down there were piercing shrieks coming from the water, but it was too dark to distinguish the forms… Burton stated there was no time to save anything, and it was a case of getting into the boats at once or going down with the ship. (cited on p.300)

It was a clearly marked hospital ship… it should never have happened.

Efforts to hold the German captain accountable for this war crime failed. He went on to serve on U-boats in WW2…

Author: Krista Vane-Tempest
Title: Edith Blake’s War
Publisher: NewSouth Publishing, 2021
Cover design by Nada Backovic
ISBN: 9781742237398, pbk., 353 pages including Acknowledgements, Bibliography and Notes
Source: Bayside Library

Picture credits: HMHS Glenart Castle By Beken – http://www.histarmar.com.ar/ArchivoFotosGral-2/VaporesSACarrioin/126.JPG, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=7448175

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