Brannavan Gnanalingam’s new novel combines his experiences
as a Tamil-background Kiwi growing up in the Hutt Valley with reflections on
how refugees adapt to a new home.
Sodden Downstream is
set on the day of a rather frequent ‘once-in-a-century’ flood. Wellington's two
arterial routes are blocked by landslips and all public transport is cancelled.
Against the flow of workers fleeing the city, Sita must make her way to the CBD
or lose her zero-hours job as a CBD cleaner.
“It's a love letter to Lower Hutt, it's an account of
people who have been forgotten in New Zealand, and it's about a refugee
persisting,” says Gnanalingam.
The novel charts the help and hindrances that make for a
long, damp evening. But the book also highlights the kinds of care and solidarity
that come out in times of need. Gnanalingam says, “Whenever I've traveled,
people with little have gone out of their way to help me. If people want to be
cynical about the kindness of everyday, working people then they probably need
to get out of their bubble."
Murdoch Stephens, editor at Lawrence and Gibson, who will
release the book, also leads the double the refugee quota campaign.
Gnanalingam says that this book was his “contribution
toward that campaign.”
Stephens says “Bran’s novel is the first truly existential
road trip book: Sita owns no car, has no romantic hopes and her journey is one
of survival rather than caprice.” He continues, “As with his other books,
Brannavan has a knack for pitch-perfect reproductions of the conversation in
which real people live.”
Gnanalingam was long-listed for the 2017 Ockham Book Awards
for his satirical spy novel A Briefcase, Two Pies and a Penthouse. The
new book is his fifth.
Sodden Downstream will
be launched at 5.30pm on 15 September at Meanwhile Gallery, Lvl 2, 99 Willis
St, Wellington with a reading from the author and a performance by Grayson
Gilmour.
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