It has a blinder of an opening that hooks you in from the very first
line, it’s set in a fascinating era and has a lead character you’re certain is
going to take you interesting places. In
The Kingdom Of Men by Kim Barnes (Hutchinson, $34.99) is evocative, with
gorgeously described landscapes and rich, sensitive prose.
Set in the 1960s, it’s the story of Gin a self-described “barefoot girl
from red-dirt Oklahoma”. Orphaned, she is left in the custody of her
grandfather, a strict Pentecostal pastor. Her youth is pretty wretched and so,
when she’s asked out by former prom king Mason McPhee, one thing quickly leads
to another, Gin sins and finds herself pregnant.
Mason does the honourable thing and marries her. He is an ambitious
young man, going places, and takes her along with him. When she loses their
baby he accepts a job working as a drilling foreman in Saudi Arabia for Aramco
(The Arabian American Oil Company); promising her a dream life with a fine
house and private swimming pool.
Gin arrives to find her new home as restrictive as the old. While she is
fascinated by the local culture – in particular the Bedouin – she is
discouraged from roaming beyond the American compound where everything is laid
on for her in air-conditioned, sanitised luxury. “We are your home away from
home and you’ll never find a better one,” she is told by an Aramco executive.
From the outset there is a mystery. What happened to the previous
occupants of their house who disappeared so quickly they left all their belongings
behind? At first Gin is too dazed by the marble floors and servants to question
much. She falls in with chain-smoking, cocktail drinking Ruthie Doucet who
keeps her amused with the local gossip while Mason is away working the rigs.
Nevertheless life as a company wife is lonely. Aside from Ruthie her
main companion is her houseboy Yash who does what he can to help her stay out
of trouble. But what Yash describes as “the education of Mrs Gin” is an uphill
battle with the independent 1950s wife chafing against the constraints of her
husband’s expectations and the culture she is living in. It is as Gin derails
that the novel seems to lose its way and unfortunately the finish is nowhere
near as dynamic as the beginning.
That said this is an absorbing and original tale. Barnes, who had an
aunt that was an Aramco wife, admits it was complex to research and there is a
dizzying list of her sources appended. Teasing a story out of so much detail,
juggling themes of oppression, corporate imperialism, feminism and more,
capturing a disappeared world so vividly, is no small achievement even if
mid-way through things do get a little bumpy at times.
In The Kingdom Of Men is an
enlightening history lesson as well as a rewarding read.
Footnote:
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