On Tuesday evening at Marsden Books in Karori, Coral Atkinson's latest novel 'Passing Through' was launched. It was a truly splendid affair. First of all huge gratitude to Marsden Books,
an independent bookseller in the suburbs, and one of the few left in Wellington.
What would writers do without Independent Booksellers? And, deliciously, it turns out that Anna
Hunt, the owner of Marsden Bookshops remembers Coral Atkinson when both of them
were a lot younger and Coral was Anna's History Teacher. A nice touch.
Coral
has published this novel under the 'Dancing Tuatara' imprint, her own and she
went to the most extraordinary lengths to make both the publication and the
promotion, a very memorable experience.
To begin with, here is the cake, that I, as 'launcher' had the honour of
cutting..
The shop was packed with
well-wishers, customers and friends, a truly warm and supportive crowd. Coral described a novel as being akin to a
Fair Isle jersey, the drawing together of colours and threads to make a
pattern. And this novel is a very fine
Fair Isle jersey that is for sure.
(Above - left to right-Anna Hunt, Maggie Rainey-Smith, Coral Atkinson)
I'm
wearing two hats this evening, one of the friend and launcher and the other of
reviewer. Coral and I have known each other
for some years now, as Black Swans during our Random days. At the same time as
Coral asked me to speak at this launch, Graham Beattie sent me a review copy. And
look, isn't it a beautiful book... replete with a dust jacket, an art deco
theme and a striking detailed pattern on the inside cover. The book was taken
from manuscript to bookshelf by students of the Whitireia New Zealand
publishing programme, who worked on
editing, production, design, publicity and marketing. What a job!
But
the real job, is the writing of a novel and Coral is a craftswoman. She is a true writer. She knuckles down and she does the hard
yards. She is gifted, determined, and
has that special quality that being both Irish and a Kiwi brings. I quote from Coral herself ‘I have forged a style in my writing that
draws on two traditions – New Zealand and Ireland.’ She is a story-teller who captivates and who
understands her reader.
'Passing
Through' is a very, very good novel. It
tackles the tricky themes of war, post traumatic stress and the occult. It opens
with a prologue, Christchurch 1923 and we meet Nan one of the central
and intriguing characters who years voices from the other side, both a gift and
a burden. And if like me you are a
non-believer, then bear with me, Coral is clever. She walks the fine line with the believer and
the non-believer, drawing the reader in with just enough to tantalise the
non-believer, and she makes all her characters wholly believable.
Nan
ends up in tow with Ro, an Englishman who has moved to New Zealand after the
war. He was once a young man who with
his brother Ham had thought war would be a bit of a lark. He is now a bitter rogue willing to feed off
the desperation of the recently bereaved and hoping to make a fortune offering contact
with the deceased with the help of Nan, who genuinely does hear voices. Coral juggles nicely the fraudulent and
sometimes hilarious practices of the fake psychics without undermining the true
gift that Nan has. So believer or
non-believer, as a reader, you will be seduced.
We
meet Louisa Craddock who was a New Zealand nurse working in England during the
war and whose husband Teddy is 'missing in action'. Ro is a charmer who attempts to woo, and she
is just bereaved enough and vulnerable to be drawn to him and although you know
she shouldn't be, you understand. And
then there is the shell-shocked Harry who finds refuge in Louisa's garden shed.
All of the characters inhabit a world fresh from the wounds of the Great War,
new territory, wounds of the psyche, as yet not fully understood, and yet to be
named.
There
is love, the beginnings of true love, and here Coral excels. She has the gift herself ... that of writing
well about intimacy, one of the trickier terrains that writers negotiate. She reminds me of Fiona Kidman the way she
writes so well, the unexpected earthiness at times. I quote Siobhan Harvey "Again
and again, Atkinson's portrayal of realistic love reflects the kind of passion
a 21st-century reader can believe in"
And
too, this novel ends on a note of hope. Not a nicely wrapped up parcel but a
nuanced ending leaving room for the reader to bring their imagination to the
story, to write their own scenario as I have (not telling). In this novel, the characters are never
one-dimensional and you keep hope in your heart for them all.
Don't
judge a book by its cover they tell us, but in this instance, you most
certainly can. I love that my friend, Coral, once a Black Swan, has morphed
into a Dancing Tuatara - let's dance with her tonight and too, I have a feeling
that this novel will be dancing off the bookshelves all around New Zealand.
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