Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Tipping Point

 

Set in a country town in northern NSW, Luke, the brother of Detective Kate Miles returns for the funeral of Marcus, a school friend, who was shot. Ant, another school friend appears to have committed suicide recently. The three boys, Luke, Marcus and Ant were a close-knit group at school. Now only Luke is left, and he becomes a person of interest to the police as he appears to be the last person to have seen Marcus alive. 

In Tipping Point by Dinuka McKenzie we learn about the relationships between the three boys over the years. Much of the focus hearkens back to events at an eighteenth birthday party held seventeen years earlier and how these may be impacting on the present events. Luke has also just lost his job and is being questioned by police about an incident that led to his dismissal.

This book provides a study of how inappropriate (often forgotten) acts from the past can impact upon future events and continue to affect people over time. Topics in the book cover date rape, the sharing of intimate media clips, domestic violence and coercive control as well as depression and suicide.  

As in the previous two books in this series, the focus continues to be on how Kate juggles with her police work and looking after two young children as well as her relationship with other family members. When the press learns of Luke’s possible involvement in the death of Marcus, Kate has to step down from the case but investigates another line of enquiry.

Tipping Point is another well written, fast moving crime novel – a welcome addition to the sub-genre of Aussie Noir.

Sunday, May 26, 2024

Remarkably Bright Creatures

Tova Sullivan lived alone in a house built by her grandfather in Sowell Bay. When her husband died Tova knew that she had to keep busy so she began working night-shifts as a cleaner  at the Sowell Bay Aquarium. Tova knew that keeping busy was the best way of coping with life's challenges - something she had done since her 18 year old son, Erik, had drowned thirty years previously.

Over the years Tova has had many friends in Sowell Bay but as they are getting older they are beginning to move from the area. She therefore considers her future and perhaps the need to sell her home despite Barbara, Janice and Ethan encouraging her to stay. 

Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt is not only Tova's story but also the story of Cameron, a young man who arrives in Sowell Bay in the hope of discovering his father. The third thread in the novel is the story of Marcellus, a giant Pacific octopus who forms a friendship with Tova when she visits the aquarium at night.

Marcellus is a focal point of the book as he observes the activities in the aquarium, reflects on his previous life in the ocean and attempts to assist Tova discover what happened to her son.

To some extent this is a story about being alone and trying to combat loneliness. It is also about friendship. For Tova and Cameron it is also a story of investigating the past so they can determine their futures.

This was a Monash University Alumni Book Club suggested book in 2024.

This was the Monash University Alumni Book Club book for August 2025. 

Netflix are making a film of  Remarkably Bright Creatures which is being released in May 2026.

I reread the book when we were on holidays on the Sunshine Coast and thoroughly enjoyed time with Marcellus, Tova and the other characters again. At Mooloolaba we visited Sea Life Aquarium where we found a small octopus trying to hide in plain sight.

As I watched the octopus I wondered what it thought of the many people passing the enclosure.

Giant Pacific Octopus - Monterey Bay Aquarium 

Tuesday, May 21, 2024

The Benevolent Society of Ill-Mannered Ladies

Set during Regency England, The Benevolent Society of Ill-Mannered Ladies by Alison Goodman tells the story of twins, Lady Augusta (Gus) Colebrook and Lady Julia Colebrook, as they strive to adapt to changes in their lives enforced by their younger brother who evicts them from the family home in London when he marries. The sisters had inherited the house when their father died. Fortunately they are women of independent means and were able to purchase their own home at a better address, much to the displeasure of their brother who wanted the power of them being dependent on him.

The women continue to live their own lives which includes, with the assistance of staff and friends, rescuing women and girls who have been locked away from society for a variety of reasons. Much of the novel portrays the injustices and cruelty faced by many females during the Regency period.

The Benevolent Society of Ill-Mannered Ladies is a combination of historical fiction, adventure plus a little romance as Lady Augusta and Lady Julia decide that being older, unmarried ladies does not mean that they cannot choose how they want to live their lives. And they are determined that they and other ladies should live their lives to the full - not under the command of men.

Friday, May 17, 2024

The Mystery Writer

The Mystery Writer is another fast paced crime novel with many twists by Sulari Gentill. Theo arrives unexpectedly at the home of her brother, Gus, who had moved to America from Australia many years ago and is now working as a lawyer. Theo also started studying law in Australia but has given it up to become a mystery writer.

During the day, Theo usually writes in a cafe near home where a number of other writers also work. There she meets Dan Murdoch, one of her favourite authors, and they become friends. Theo's life changes when she discovers Dan's body. This begins a series of nightmarish events with subsequent murders and Theo, her brother and a friend being main subjects.

There are many layers adding to the main story in this novel including eccentric families who are preparing for future disaster and the influence of conspiracy theories in creating and altering public opinion to their will. As the suspense grew I was reluctant to put his book down until the last chapter.

Monday, May 13, 2024

Praiseworthy

In Praiseworthy, Alexis Wright has written a saga revolving around an Aboriginal community, Praiseworthy, situated near the sea in northern Australia. The main characters in this story are Cause Man Steele, also referred to as Widespread and Planet, his wife with Chinese ancestry who was known as Dance and their two sons, seventeen year old Aboriginal Sovereignty and eight year old Tommyhawk Steele.

It takes 723 pages of small print to tell this allegory of Aboriginal people striving to exist in their own country under rules devised by white men. This results in the creation of a confused no man's land where plans and ideas keep changing depending on the mood. To add to the challenges a huge haze has descended on the area where Praiseworthy is situated. Widespread is convinced that this is the result of global warming and he is determined to find his own solution.

Around the town are many feral donkeys and Widespread decides that he needs to round up as many donkeys as he can to form a business enterprise delivering and carrying goods and people when transport using fossil fuel is no longer available. However he needs a special flagship donkey for this enterprise and spends much of the book traipsing around the country in a broken down car looking for the perfect donkey to be the mascot for the enterprise. When he finds a contender the donkey travels back to the community with him in his car. 

Dance lives in her own world and is obsessed with moths and butterflies which live in the area in abundance. As her relationship with Widespread diminishes she decides to try and find a way to travel to China as a refugee - to return to the country of part of her family. Widespread and Dance live on land in the local cemetery and are convinced that they are traditional owners of this land which does not impress the other inhabitants of the area.

 The two sons of Widespread and Dance do not get on and live different lives though each is aware of the other's presence at different times during the book. 

Aboriginal Sovereignty marries the girl who had been promised to him as a wife since they were children. He is seventeen but she is fifteen. This is OK according to Aboriginal law but not according to white man's law. The girl is sent away to the city for 'safety'. When Aboriginal Sovereignty is arrested he escapes from custody and is last seen disappearing into the sea, a place where many local young people commit suicide.

Tommyhawk is obsessed with social media which he accesses on his phone and other devices. He regularly follows all the reports on white men's views about life in Aboriginal communities including how the communities are inhabited by pedophiles. Tommyhawk wants to leave Praiseworthy to live in safety with white people in Canberra. It is Tommyhawk who reports his brother marrying an underage girl to authorities.

When Aboriginal Sovereignty disappears the local people form search parties to search for him along the beach and in the nearby waters. They are watched over by the spirits of the past who reflect on life in general and changes since their time. From this point Aboriginal Sovereignty becomes a theme of the book as well as the name of a character.

Praiseworthy is also full of churches representing a variety of sects who also try to have an influence in the community. Aboriginal elders, past and present also have words to say about what is happening in Praiseworthy and environs.

As well as Aboriginal Sovereignty, some of the themes in the book include attitudes to the effect of white man's laws and regulations on Aboriginal communities, the development of many Aboriginal communities relying on Canberra for handouts for projects, 'bridging the gap', abuse of children, global warming and care of the environment in general. 

There are several stories meandering through the novel as the plot is revealed through a river of time, often reversing on itself. There is humour in many places, often dark humour, as the author attempts in this saga to encourage the reader to think about the impact of colonisation on the life of the Aboriginal people.

Praiseworthy is the winner of the 2024 Stella Prize, the 2024 Miles Franklin Literary Award and also the 2023 Queensland Literary Awards — Fiction Book Award. The novel also won the 2024 James Tait Black award for fiction (awarded by the University of Edinburgh) and also the Hawthornden Prize for imaginative literature.

Think of the Children - Sydney Review of Books - 5 June 2023 

Praiseworthy by Alix Wright - How can one novel contain so much? - The Guardian 28 April 2023.

Thursday, May 9, 2024

Open Throat

Open Throat, written by Henry Hoke, is a novella narrated by a hungry mountain lion as it observes the world around it. In 156 pages we learn of the life and thoughts of the mountain lion as it regards its environment in a park under the Hollywood sign near Los Angeles. The lion manages to survive but food is not plentiful and there is often danger. It watches hikers walking the various trails in the park and also keeps an eye on a tent settlement where homeless people live. However when a hiker sets fire to one of tents the mountain lion is forced to find safety elsewhere as the fire spreads throughout the park.

The mountain lion finds itself in an urban area as it seeks refuge. Eventually it hides in the cellar of a house where it encounters a teenage girl who befriends it until her father discovers the mountain lion in the house.

The book reads as a prose poem. There is no punctuation but each sentence begins on a new line and there is double spacing between each sentence making it easy to read. The state of the environment, homelessness and inequalities in LA are some of the themes in this work as the mountain lion struggles to survive.

Open Throat was nominated for the 2024 James Tait Black Award.

Wednesday, May 8, 2024

Though the Bodies Fall

Michael Burns lives with his family in an isolated house at Kerry Head on the Irish coast. The area is known for the cliffs which have served as a suicide spot over the years. Michael's grandparents made it their mission to try and help the 'visitors' who came to the cliffs and many lives were saved. This role was passed to Michael's parents, particularly his mother who made the saving of those planning to commit suicide her major role in life.

Though the Bodies Fall by Noel O'Reagan is the story of family and how a feeling of responsibility can overtake the awareness of the needs of other family members.

After his father died, Michael was drafted into assisting his mother with her mission. After finishing school he did escape for a few years but ,when he finally returned home, assisting the 'visitors' became his obsession to the detriment of his relationships with other family members, his career and his health.

The story is revealed in several time frames. As well as viewing events in the present, we see life when Michael and his two sisters were children as well as Michael's failed marriage. The novel deals with how Michael's life deteriorates as his sense of duty to others overtakes his life. Throughout the book the descriptions of the landscape add to the atmosphere of the novel.

Though the Bodies Fall is on the short list for the 2024 James Tait Black Award.