In
the Memorial Room by Janet Frame (Text Publishing).
Reviewed by Gordon
McLauchlan
This novel is lightly
brushed satire, mostly arch in tone, deftly poking fun at writing groupies and
other poseurs as well as writing residencies. But what may take some readers
aback is that there is surely something here of self-parody as the author pins
a certain type of character to the wall with devastating insight.
When Frame’s new and previously uncollected short stories were
published last year under the title Gorse
is Not People, I wrote in a review that they represented her last work,
were “a wrap on a stellar career”. Now
we know they weren’t a wrap at all with the surfacing of this previously
unknown work, something different from anything she had done before.
Glancing
back at those short stories I am reminded that her earlier work is not at all
free from glancing blows at certain types of people, but none quite so
penetrating as this book.
Harry
Gill is the first-person protagonist’s name. He wins the “Watercress-Armstrong
Fellowship” which takes him to Menton where Janet Frame spent months in the
1970s as Katherine Mansfield Fellow. Gill travels through this story from pathological
shyness to near-obliteration. In conversation
over his fellowship accommodation soon after his arrival in Menton he says to
himself: “I agreed. I’m an habitual agreer.”
He
then travels down a road towards a kind of annihilation. Fearing he is going
blind he consults Dr Rumor in Menton who
tells him he is seeking invisibility: “You are not ill, you are not going
blind, you are a sane man, I believe. But through a combination of
circumstances, through being in a certain place – which must be here, this city, at a certain time, and
in the company of certain people, you are on the point of vanishing.”
He
doesn’t go blind. He becomes stone deaf. He again consults Dr Rumor who calls
his condition “Auditory Retaliation. Strategy of War”, and predicts it will
last only as long as his fellowship. Gill refuses to see a specialist and, back
in his fellowship environment, insists he is permanently deaf. He shrinks
behind his defensive wall.
This
novel, it seems, was written either while Frame was at Menton or not long
afterwards and it is impossible not to read it as a satire, a self-parody,
based on difficulties she faced there – as the shy and reclusive woman that she
was. That, it is obvious, was the reason she refused its publication until
after her death.
Gordon McLauchlan (left) is an Auckland-based writer & commentator and a regular reviewer on this blog.
1 comment:
Australian writer/critic Angela Meyer has done a very perceptive review which can be reached via her blog, where there is an interesting discussion in the comments thread (eg: "With the dead writer character Frame is also exploring the glory afforded to authors (good or mediocre) after their death; the way they are picked over, used, in a way; the way the meaning of their life and work changes. And with full knowledge that in life one can hardly control one’s public image, let alone in death, by releasing a posthumous novel Frame is at least a part of the conversation on her own status as a dead author, if you get my drift. It’s wonderfully clever." http://literaryminded.com.au/2013/05/04/review-of-janet-frames-in-the-memorial-room-for-the-australian/
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