Shonagh Koea – Vintage – Paperback - $29.99
Reviewed by The Bookman on
Radio New Zealand National this morning with Kathryn Ryan.
While I
found this novel, which I read in one day, both
compelling and atmospheric I also found it quite disturbing, more and
more so as the story developed.
It is the
story of Ellis Leigh, a widow, retired from the work force and with one adult
son who lives in London. She is a very private,
solitary, rather unsociable in many ways, an outsider I guess, an eccentric woman who has
fallen on hard times financially. It is set in two New Zealand locations, one a
large city to the north and the other a provincial town to the south. Although
the place names are not mentioned one imagines they could be Auckland and
perhaps Wanganui or New Plymouth.
Ellis looks
back on her life all the way back to childhood, high school , marriage,
becoming a mother, her gardens past and present, the mistake she made in moving
back to her childhood town, the troubles selling her home there which delayed
her return to the northern city. All this biographical detail is gradually
unveiled and along with it the gradual revealing of a handsome and wealthy man,
a suitor with whom she has clearly had some appalling experience. Interestingly
we do not actually meet the man until page 205 of the 264 page novel.
It is hard
to say much about it without giving too much of the story away. I would say
though that if you are a retired woman living alone, as is our protagonist,
this is probably not a book you would want to read at night.
To quote a sentence
from the back cover blurb which I think
sums up the book superbly - “Written in Shonagh Koea’s distinctive style, this
compelling novel is at times darkly humorous but also deeply unsettling”.
In The Oxford Companion to New Zealand
Literature it is suggested that Koea's
territory is ‘the contrast between domestic misery and various forms of
withdrawal or escape'.
This latest book certainly fits within that description.
This is a very fine piece of writing from one of our
senior and much-admired writers which I warmly recommend but with the proviso
that readers should be prepared to be unsettled by it. Great title too which
those who read the novel will appreciate is especially apt.
About the
author:
Shonagh Koea has published short stories,
novels and memoir. North & South commented that ‘Shonagh Koea
has a command of prose, an originality of expression, a sophisticated wit and a
richness of imagery, which makes her writing a delight.' She won the Air
New Zealand Short Story Award (1981), her novel Sing to Me, Dreamer was
a finalist in the New Zealand Book Awards (1995), and The Lonely Margins of
the Sea was runner-up for the Deutz Medal for Fiction (1999). She has held the
University of Auckland Fellowship in Literature (1993) and the Buddle Findlay
Sargeson Fellowship (1997).
1 comment:
This is a great review and does not put me off in the least. It's good to be 'disturbed' sometimes, I think. One of the purposes of writers writing: to challenge, to push, to nudge or shove out into the light some of the darkness. Thanks, Graham
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