Monday, February 17, 2014

Going fishing again chickens



But this time it's more this



than this




I'm going west, and because I think I've been blathering about it for months, you already know this. I'm going to sessions at the Perth Writers Festival, and I'm booked in to do all sorts of writery goodnesses.

I'm hanging out with Sarah Toa, writer of Salt Story and blogger at A WineDark Sea, and I'm really really excited about meeting her and seeing her world.

After Perth I'm hiring a car and driving south to Albany, which is where Sarah lives. I'm going to meet new people and see new things, smell the air of the west and be under a different sky.

I don't know that we'll go fishing but we'll see the sea, oh yes.

Hope everyone well, back soon.

Monday, February 10, 2014

The Luminaries, by Eleanor Catton





Is it possible for a book of 800+ pages to make you wait more than 500 pages for some feeling of it 'kicking in'?

Yes

Is it possible for a book to be almost stupefyingly boring for more than half of it, for it only to start to spin faster and faster on some centrifuge so that by the last page, you have been gripped and drawn inwards, and are almost breathless and rigid with joy while reading those last few words?

Yes

Is it possible for a book to lose your attention not once but several times, so that you put it to the side and read - from cover to cover - maybe four or five other books?

Yes

It is possible that a book you were on the verge of giving away, and about which had said things like 'it's killing me' and 'I just don't get it' and 'this book is so fucking confusing', made you want to finish it like no other book you've ever read?

Yes

This is the book. I am full of awe for Catton's application of form, and for how she somehow made me finish this book. It's a book filled with trickery - sparkles - sleight of hand - and a thing that lives somehow on its own. It's so quiet, it rocks you to sleep for most of the reading experience, and it does seem to me that it's the experience of reading this book that is the greater thing here.

I know this is hyperbole but man, it's what I'm feeling right now. It's a sneaky sneaky fucker of a thing, and magic in the way that its very long tail whips right around a corner at the end, and slaps you over the head. It wakes you up, for you have fallen almost into coma, the words sliding across your eyes. You're not taking anything in. Who the hell is he again? (Check the front page reference). And who is that? What is she doing? (Check the front page reference again. Blame heatwave. Brain is not working. Usually it works better than this.) That front page reference doesn't really help - it's like a whisper, so faint; you know you are meant to be getting something, but what, what? It's like there is water across your eyes, something plugging your ears.


You give up, almost, and then someone on twitter says it's a fabulous book.

But, you want to say, and finally you do: But didn't you find it really hard to follow?

Someone else on twitter goes yes, so hard to follow! I want to give up. I don't get it!

Something has taken you by the hand, something that reached out from page 509 or so. You go back to that page to check what it was, and you CAN'T SEE IT. It doesn't matter, you race to the end. You start to feel glimmers of understanding, but you know it's only a fraction of the whole.

You finish. You flirt with the idea of going back to the beginning, reading that first half again. Now you will understand more, see more. It's like the gold in the river, the colour almost blending with the soil. You think you see something, but no. A trick of the light. A sparkle of nothing. But yes, there it is. There is something.

I am exhausted and exhilarated.

The Luminaries. I recommend and I caution. It's an absolute motherfucker of a thing.