The ongoing tug-of
war between Australia and New Zealand over who can claim as theirs everything
from Russell Crowe to Phar Lap, pavlova, and Crowded House, just got another
player. Graeme Simsion was born in Auckland, lives in Melbourne and has written
one of the quirkiest, most adorable novels I’ve come across
The Rosie Project (Text, $37) is the story of Professor Don Tillman a
geneticist with undiagnosed Asperger’s Syndrome (we presume) who is lonely and
looking for love. Don decides to approach looking for a partner the way he does
everything else in life, scarily systematically. He dubs his quest “The Wife
Project” and creates a 16-page questionnaire designed to help him find the
perfect, punctual, non-smoking, non horoscope-reading woman. With the help of
his only two friends, Gene and Claudia, he embarks on his search.
But The Wife
Project is derailed when Gene introduces him to Rosie Jarman who is everything
Don isn’t looking for in a woman. Feisty, challenging Rosie shakes up his life,
not only disrupting some of the strict schedules he lives by, but involving him
in a project of her own, to track down her biological father.
The Rosie Project
takes over, with Don devising inventive ways to obtain DNA from the possible
contenders, during which he discovers all sorts of illuminating new things –
from the social unsuitability of quick-dry clothing to his prowess as a
cocktail waiter. Flying in the face of science, he finds himself attracted to
Rosie, and soon is abandoning routines, attempting to make jokes and even
rethinking his wardrobe.
The Rosie Project began life as a screenplay that business consultant
Simsion then turned into a novel. Now being published in thirty countries
around the world, it’s poised to become one of the year’s bestsellers and
deservedly so. This is a fresh, funny story, written with verve and great timing.
So is it
politically correct to joke about Asperger’s Syndrome? I suspect not but
Simsion pulls it off anyway, partly because the book has so much heart but
mainly because Don Tillman is such a fantastic, lovable, geeky character that
you’re cheering for him from page one.
Simsion never
officially labels Don as an “Aspie”, saying he wanted readers to approach the
character as a complex person rather than a set of symptoms – a smart move and
it’s worked. Socially awkward, dysfunctional, vulnerable; there’s a little bit
of Don in all of us.
There are messages
here about society’s intolerance of those deemed “different”, about our need
for companionship no matter who or what we are and how love can defy logic, but
all are delivered in a way that’s comic and caring, rather than carping.
I loved The Rosie Project. It’s an entertaining
read from start to finish, thoughtful and fun, very different and utterly
charming, a brilliant first novel from a mature, clever writer.
If you ask me we
should lay claim to Graeme Simsion and let Australia keep Russell Crowe.
Footnote:
Footnote:
Footnote 2:
Mark my words we are going to hear a lot more about this author. This book (publication this Wednesday) is one of the funniest and most enchanting books I have read in a long while, and I totally agree with Nicky Pellegrino's assessment. Don't miss it, wonderfully entertaining, absolutely brilliant.
Mark my words we are going to hear a lot more about this author. This book (publication this Wednesday) is one of the funniest and most enchanting books I have read in a long while, and I totally agree with Nicky Pellegrino's assessment. Don't miss it, wonderfully entertaining, absolutely brilliant.
1 comment:
We keep Phar Lap too.
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