Current:Home > ContactThis Australian writer might be the greatest novelist you've never heard of -WealthPro Academy
This Australian writer might be the greatest novelist you've never heard of
View
Date:2025-04-16 02:00:36
I sometimes think that great writers come in two types. The first show very little interest in the everyday world of people and events. A perfect example is the just-minted Nobel laureate, the Norwegian Jon Fosse, whose haunting new novella A Shining feels otherworldly: A nameless man heads into a cold, mysterious forest and has a religious experience.
In the other group, you find writers who dive headlong into our shared world of romance and pettiness, family and political squabbling. You get all this and more in the work of Helen Garner, the Australian novelist, journalist, diarist and screenwriter who, at 80, occupies the galvanizing spot in her culture once held in America by the likes of Mary McCarthy, Joan Didion and Susan Sontag. Steeped in her messy personal experience of the counter-culture and the gender wars, Garner's books win big prizes, kickstart controversies and say things other people rarely dare. Yet when I mention her name here, almost nobody has even heard of her.
In hopes of correcting this, Pantheon Books has begun releasing several of Garner's books, starting with perhaps her two most widely admired works: her short 1984 novel The Children's Bach, and This House of Grief, her elegiac 2014 book about a nation-transfixing murder that I think superior to Truman Capote's dodgy, preeningly literary In Cold Blood.
The more immediately gripping of the two is the latter. This House of Grief follows the year's-long judicial prosecution of Robert Farquharson, a floundering laborer who, on Father's Day 2005, drove his car off an overpass into water, killing the three sons he'd had with his recently estranged wife. He insisted it wasn't a deliberate crime – and his ex believed him – yet the police investigation decided it was murder.
Sitting in the courtroom day after day, Garner charts the ebb and flow of a sometimes boring, sometimes exciting process to which she responds with the shifting sympathies of a theatergoer. If she often feels for the accused, who strikes her as little more than a lost man-child, she's skeptical of the defense's claim that he couldn't have killed his sons because he loved them, writing:
There it was again, the sentimental fantasy of love as a condition of simple benevolence, a tranquil, sunlit region in which we are safe from our own destructive urges.
Garner uses the case — and her reactions to it — to think about wounded masculinity, collapsing families, the theatricality of courtrooms and the unknowable mystery of human behavior. Tinged with mourning, the book leaves us wondering what justice might mean in a tragedy where everyone winds up a victim.
Life is less bleak, but no less tricky in The Children's Bach, a generational saga that unfolds like a version of The Big Chill if it had been written by Virginia Woolf. Set during the disillusioned aftermath of the counter-culture, it centers on a couple, good-hearted Dexter and placid Athena, whose cozy, vaguely bohemian life wobbles when his spiky college friend, Elizabeth, turns up. She introduces them to an alienated teenage girl and a womanizing musician, and guides them to a punkish underground scene that unleashes fears and yearnings that were lurking there all along. In the end, this opalescent masterpiece is less a plotted story than a series of resonantly emblematic moments that catch the essence of the characters as they chase the secret of happiness.
Although different in style and tone, both books reveal Garner's great gift — an ability to cut to the heart of things. She's not out to wow us with a fancy style; rather, her elegantly direct prose is always wrestling with that essential feminist concern: the politics of domestic life. And she's not afraid to be thorny. In her bracingly unsentimental novel The Spare Room, the autobiographical heroine looks after a friend with terminal cancer and is flooded with resentment at the dying woman's delusions and narcissism.
This isn't to say that Garner's work is dark or nasty. Crackling with curiosity and unpredictability, she embraces the many-sidedness of life: defending suburbia, expressing admiration for the skills of working-class blokes – even when they're sexists – pondering the joys of old age, and admitting that, like me, her heart melts when she hears the theme music to the TV series Midnight Diner. The house of her imagination sets aside nice big rooms for love and pleasure and forgiveness.
Near the end of The Children's Bach, the womanizing musician tells Athena how to write a song. "You have to steer a line," he says, "between what you understand and what you don't." He could well be describing what makes Garner's work so compelling. Reading her, I'm always inspired that a writer who already knows so much of life never stops pushing herself into unknown territory.
veryGood! (872)
Related
- What polling shows about Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Harris’ new running mate
- Biden keeps quiet as Gaza protesters and police clash on college campuses
- Four players suspended after Brewers vs. Rays benches-clearing brawl
- Robert De Niro accused of berating pro-Palestinian protesters during filming for Netflix show
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Star Wars Day is Saturday: Celebrate May the 4th with these deals
- A new Statehouse and related projects will cost about $400 million
- Füllkrug fires Dortmund to 1-0 win over Mbappé's PSG in Champions League semifinal first leg
- RFK Jr. closer to getting on New Jersey ballot after judge rules he didn’t violate ‘sore loser’ law
- United Methodists lift 40-year ban on LGBTQ+ clergy, marking historic shift for the church
Ranking
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- OSHA probe finds home care agency failed to protect nurse killed in Connecticut
- Who is Luke James? Why fans are commending the actor's breakout role in 'Them: The Scare'
- Jury at Abu Ghraib civil trial might not be able to reach verdict: judge says
- Man charged with murder in death of beloved Detroit-area neurosurgeon
- Who is Luke James? Why fans are commending the actor's breakout role in 'Them: The Scare'
- A list of mass killings in the United States this year
- 6 injured, including children, in drive-by shooting in Fort Worth, Texas, officials say
Recommendation
Kourtney Kardashian Cradles 9-Month-Old Son Rocky in New Photo
Paul Auster, 'The New York Trilogy' author and filmmaker, dies at 77
Students reunite with families after armed boy fatally shot outside Mount Horeb school: Here's what we know
Kristi Yamaguchi: Dorothy Hamill doll inspired me. I hope my Barbie helps others dream big.
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
Advocates say Supreme Court must preserve new, mostly Black US House district for 2024 elections
Serbia prepares to mark school shooting anniversary. A mother says ‘everyone rushed to forget’
Horoscopes Today, May 1, 2024