Monday, June 29, 2009

Wild Oats and Wings


The Angel's Cut by Elizabeth Knox is a grown up fairy tale and like the fairy tales for the little ones unpicks the dark seams of the human heart. The angel Xas is back from The Vintner's Luck and this time is in Hollywood, flying stunt planes for the movies. His immortality is a burden and Sobran the love of his life is long lost to time. He becomes infatuated with Cole, a narcissist movie mogul. Xas is deeply damaged by Lucifer's removal of his wings; the stubby remains of these become a secret he hides from his maniacal lover. Cole has all the manias: nymphomania, megalomania and probably a few more that haven't been discovered! He treats Xas and his other lovers appallingly.

Xas befriends two fabulous women: Millie a "coloured" stunt pilot whose dream is to establish a flying school for "coloured" pilots" (banned from learning to fly in "white" flying schools) and Flora, a former actor now editor, damaged terribly by a fire that has rendered her unable to have sex easily by the unfortunate location of her scars. Nevertheless she has a child with another narcissist movie maker Connie, the birth of which kills her.

It's a book about modernity. Its amazing how the world has changed since The Vitner's Luck where Xas was Sobran's lover for life. An elicit love for sure, but a stable one. This stability is gone in The Angel's Cut. The view of heaven and hell, of God Xas and Lucifer is also fascinating, especially the idea that the souls that go to heaven are happy but lose their selfhood. I am still thinking about this book. It is a wonderful evocation of our dreams and disappointments.

I also read Hungry Woman in Paris by Josefina Lopez. I loved her movie Real Women Have Curves, and was attracted by the forbidden fruit style cover in my local book shop. Canela is running from that vague ennui after a broken engagement and ends up in Paris at a cooking school almost by default really. She's a very passive character and this applies to her relationships with men - she falls into whatevers on offer, sowing some wild oats rather vividly! As a Mexican-American, she is drawn to the outsiders in Paris, the Arabs and also a Chinese woman refused service at the Louis vouitton shop. She meets very few French people other than her teachers, the chefs for whom oral sex seems de rigeur with one's creme anglaise. It's a novel, obviously, but what i found most interesting is that she's writing about out her world - the outsider's perspective is very interesting. Interesting, too, is that the ennui follows her to Paris and follows her home. It wasn't a simple go to Paris, fix your life tome like one or two others.

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Phillip Marlowe hits Yarraville and Blue, Blue Love

Nick Gadd's Ghostlines is a classic kind of detective novel. His detective Phillip Trudeau is a jaded, scarred by the world type with a drinking problem, a little Rebus, a little Humprey Bogart as Marlowe. The writing, fittingly, is very clean and manly. Straight up as it were...


While the plot with it's underdog exposing the unethical rich narrative is appealing, what is extraordinary about this novel is its wonderful evocation of Melbourne. It begins with a kid on a bike being hit by a train and continues from this point to an old man's cluttered house in Williamstown to the sushi bar infected cbd. I loved a sub plot about the Maribyrnong group and and artist named Valerie. He managed to weave in much that was really Melbourne.




I have also been dipping into collection of stories about lovers' quarrels called Let's Call the Whole Thing Off. I loved the artfulness of the writing. Its "ready for my close-up" stuff; no word is really wasted. Dorothy Parker opens the anthology with painfully observed post wedding conversation between a bride and groom about a tiara. The wife picks, the husband deflects then overacts, the wife retreats, the husband makes amends. Darkly comic or depressing depending on one's own state of mind. Jhumpa Lahiri also had a newlywed story that travelled this fine line between love and resentment. The stories are diverse, crossing cultures and sexualities. My favourite was a story about bedrooms and the differing decorating styles of men and women. It was witty and whimsical. Pink has her heart brolen by Blue but eventually finds love again with Green! Gotta watch out for those Blues....


Earlier in the month I read Fred Vargas The Three Evangelists - good quirky french detective fun - and Robin Bowles' The Case of the Missing Masterpiece - more local, slightly less fun.


Friday, June 5, 2009

Music and car crashes

There is much to love about good young adult fiction - the possibility is there for character and story and also a form of untrendy mimesis that can be so refreshing. It is lovely to see your world reflected back to you and to enter the head of a character you like to share a little of their life with them. This was very much the case with me and the book "If I Stay" by Gayle Forman; the narrator Mia had a nice take on the world. She's also in a coma after a car crash and in a Lovely Bones sort of way is commenting on her ailing body as it hangs on to life in the ICU. So the novel moves from this to her memories, happy memories of her family, her friend Kim and her boyfriend Adam. The parents are great characters the mum is a rock chick and the dad a reformed punk English teacher. Their life is very ordinary - chats about life while doing the dishes, school and circle of friends and family. The big idea - how do you get over losses that seem insurmountably cruel? - is always interesting, and this book explores it in a gentle compelling way. Almost everyone in the story has a relationship to music, and choosing your music - be it The Ramones or Yo Yo Ma - works as a metaphor for choosing your way. Its a weepy! ... but the sadness feels very honest, and the books explorations of life, love and memory ring true. The writing is lovely - it seems effortless but is understated and artful.