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March 2013, no. 349

Welcome to the March 2013 issue of ABR Online – the first to appear on our revamped website. Now all our print subscribers can enjoy ABR Online too – it comes free with your subscription.

Don Dunstan is our cover boy this month, in those infamous short pants. Ruth Starke – the fifth ABR Patrons’ Fellow – writes at length about this fascinating reformer. Morag Fraser reviews J.M. Coetzee’s new novel, The Childhood of Jesus, vis-à-vis Louise Erdrich’s award-winning novel The Round House. Other highlights include a new poem by Les Murray and Peter Rose’s editorial diary for 2013.

Morag Fraser reviews The Childhood of Jesus by  J.M. Coetzee and The Round House by Louise Erdrich
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Custom Article Title: Morag Fraser reviews 'The Childhood of Jesus' by J.M. Coetzee and 'The Round House' by Louise Erdrich
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Book 1 Title: The Childhood of Jesus
Book Author: J.M. Coetzee
Book 1 Biblio: Text Publishing, $34.99 hb, 324 pp, 9781922079701
Book 2 Title: The Round House
Book 2 Author: Louise Erdrich
Book 2 Biblio: Constable (Allen & Unwin), $29.99 pb, 321pp, 9780062065247
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‘What is chaos?’ asks the unnerving child at the centre of J.M. Coetzee’s new parable-novel, The Childhood of Jesus. ‘I told you the other day,’ replies the child’s guardian. ‘Chaos is when there is no order, no laws to hold on to. Chaos is just things whirling around.’

Louise Erdrich’s The Round House begins with a lyrical intimation of chaos, of nature whirling, malevolently. ‘Small trees had attacked my parents’ house at the foundation,’ writes Joe Coutts, the novel’s narrator-in-retrospect. Ash shoots, elm, maple, box elder, and catalpa have burrowed into the fabric of the North Dakota home, rendering it vulnerable. To Joe, even at thirteen, ‘it seemed increasingly important … that each one of these invaders be removed down to the very tip of the root, where all the vital growth was concentrated’. While Joe is prising out these vegetable invaders, a white man has raped Joe’s mother, Geraldine, somewhere on the reservation, in a place sacred to their Ojibwe people.

As writers, Coetzee and Erdrich could hardly be more different, out of different worlds, different crucibles – white South Africa and Native America. In style they are distinct – Coetzee so spare, allusive (and elusive), Erdrich discursive, seemingly straightforward. But both use their diverse fictional forms to shape experience – some of it their own – into profound, often devastating interrogations of human behaviour and moral understanding. They have irony in common and wit to spare – the latter often robust in its earthiness. The authors offer no easy truths and little consolation, and yet they nourish. It was sheer accident that I came to read them in tandem, but the exercise was bracing and illuminating. As writers they complement one another – ground bass to melody – alternating parts. And like the lawyer–writer Bernhard Schlink (notably in The Reader, his famously controversial 1995 novel about guilt and the Holocaust), they confront the Janus face of the law as we humans devise it: to create order and to liberate, but also to bind and confound.

The Childhood of Jesus announces its scope with its provocative title. The work, freighted with scriptural reference, is tantalising in its layers of meaning, its oblique references. The child is called David (Jesus, son of?). When we meet him, at the gate of a resettlement place called Novilla, he is in the care of a man named Simón, his accidental guardian. Together they have come from a camp, Belstar. Man and boy are refugees, human jetsam, subject to all the indignities we routinely inflict on people who are displaced. Simón and David struggle with the language (Spanish). They have no food, no shelter. When they go to the building nominated by an official, the key to their allotted room can’t be found. Simón asks, ‘“Do you not have a – what do you call it? – a llave universal to open our room?” “Llave maestra” the woman corrects. “There is no such thing as a llave universal. If we had a llave universal all our troubles would be over.’”

There is no universal key to unlock the mysteries of Coetzee’s narrative. One wouldn’t expect there to be from this most contained, enamelled, concrete, and surreal of writers. So one reads on, beguiled by the vivid moment, things that are what they are – a day’s work, a shared meal, a child’s delighted reading of Don Quixote – while simultaneously puzzling over the infinite regresses of meaning and reference, over what words, names, relationships betoken, in this work and throughout Coetzee’s fiction and autobiographical oeuvre. This is both new ground and echo chamber.

In The Childhood of Jesus, troubles are never over. When Simón selects Inés, a woman he has seen only once, to become David’s devoted mother, the ‘family’ does not settle into a loving union. Inés is suffocatingly protective. David – who she insists is exceptional, – is unreceptive. ‘I haven’t got a mother and I haven’t got a father. I just am,’ he declares. On the blackboard of the school he hates, before a teacher he loftily disregards, he writes ‘I am the truth.’ At other times he is a mere needy child. He ‘whines’, or asks a litany of questions that disconcert his protector Simón.

Simón, endlessly patient, wryly philosophical, is the reflective soul of the narrative, its fallible moral sounding board – and the flesh-and-blood human who engages one’s sympathy throughout. In the bland (brave?) new world he has entered with the child, he is the one character with a past. Challenged to adapt, he counters that he is not nostalgic; he clings not to memories but ‘the feel of residence in a body with a past, a body soaked in its past’. In the present, Simón drives that body to provide a subsistence for the child, and later the mother. We feel the hammer of his heart as he toils each day as a stevedore, the strain as he hoists sack after sack of grain onto his back and staggers up a gangplank. He is ‘starved of beauty’. Lectured by Eugenio, one of his oddly theoretical fellow labourers, about sexual urges and the folly of accepting the inferior copy of the ideal, he ‘tries to imagine Eugenio, this earnest young man with his owlish glasses, in the arms of an inferior copy’. Such small explosions of irony, when they come, are as welcome as rain on bush litter. The many-faceted Coetzee is never predictable, perhaps even to himself. The Childhood of Jesus is a profound meditation on one of the moral blights of our times, the treatment of refugees. But Coetzee has never been a polemicist, and this work does not preach. Rather, it instantiates. It also plays – with ideas, with symbols, with reverberations from Coetzee’s earlier writing – and it intrigues, leaving the reader forever guessing.

Louise Erdrich also mines her territory. Some of The Round House’s Ojibwe characters have appeared before, in her award-winning novel, The Plague of Doves (2008). Judge Antone Bazil Coutts reappears here, husband to Geraldine, the woman who fails to return home in the usual way on the day that father and son are rooting out the invading trees. And Mooshum, the irrepressibly sexual grandfather, reappears to tell Joe tribal tales of the origins of evil, of the spirit, the ‘wiindigoo’ that can possess people, and make them treat fellow humans as prey.

07erdrichLouise ErdrichGeraldine Coutts, like her judge husband, is a tribal official, an enrolment officer, and head of a department. She might work on a Sunday, but her rhythms are familial, predictable. In the intimacy of this close family and in the tissue of the interconnected tribe, the woman is pivotal. ‘Mom would have returned by now to start dinner. We both knew that,’ writes Joe. ‘Women don’t realize how much store men set on the regularity of their habits. We absorb their comings and goings into our bodies, their rhythms into our bones. Our pulse is set to theirs.’ When Geraldine Coutts does not appear, ‘her absence stopped time’.

The rape almost breaks the family. For a long time Geraldine Coutts withdraws, bodily and emotionally, into her room, leaving her men initially bewildered, then desperate in their pursuit of justice – or vengeance. Joe might be reading the law books in his father’s study, including ‘The Bible. Felix S. Cohen’s Handbook of Federal Indian Law’, but he also has recourse to other imperatives, to the laws implicit in his grandfather’s retelling of tribal myths.

But Erdrich’s novel is not a reform pamphlet. Issues emerge so naturally from the sprawl of her narrative that you scarcely see them coming before they are upon you, shocking in their consequences. Much of the novel is a boy’s story, told by the man, the legal prosecutor Joe becomes, but still with a boy’s freshness and naïve precocity. It is a Bildungsroman,with Huckleberry Finn and To Kill a Mockingbird the obvious antecedents. Joe and his close companions do what all boys do, and what Native American boys on a reservation do in particular. They ride, swim, boast, flirt, compete, and observe as their elders mingle, support, love, and betray one another. They experiment with alcohol and sex. They learn, imperfectly, sometimes too late. They absorb the norms and the aberrations of their own culture, and of the white culture, the white law that is always there, impinging, enticing. They belong to families that are complex, exemplary, and dysfunctional. They live in the late twentieth century (the novel opens in the summer of 1988). They embrace aspects of Christianity while being the inheritors of tribal history and custom. They ride old bikes and have race memories of buffalo.

Their women, as Joe records so movingly, are at the heart of their families, their society. Native women are also raped, in horrifying numbers – one in three according to Amnesty International figures, and eighty-six per cent of them by non-Native men. The tangle of jurisdictions means that many of the offenders are never prosecuted. But one learns all this only gradually as the novel unfolds. Erdrich has every great storyteller’s ability to lure one on, to embody the abstracts of justice and moral complexity in the everyday actions and motivations of men, women, and children.

These two works, so divergent in style and their ways of taking on the world, share a plangency that haunts one’s mind. Like the opening phrase of some Beethoven sonatas, they won’t leave one alone. Perhaps it is the immediacy of their language, their perfectly tuned dialogue that cuts into consciousness. Perhaps, in Coetzee, it is a restrained wisdom, and in Erdrich a related faithfulness to her characters, in all their knots and moral confusion. Or perhaps, in both of them, it is a goodness, to which they would not lay claim, finding profound expression in art.

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Alex OBrien reviews The 2013 Voiceless Anthology edited by J.M. Coetzee et al.
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‘Death has a dual character,’ Zadie Smith writes in her novel The Autograph Man (2002); ‘it seems to be everywhere and nowhere at the same time’. Popular culture is currently awash with cookery programs and diet fads, yet the lives of animals, and the industries that deal in their deaths, have never been more absent from city life. It seems reasonable, therefore, that all ten stories shortlisted for the Voiceless Writing Prize – judged by J.M. Coetzee, Ondine Sherman, Wendy Were, and Susan Wyndham – animate the lives of animals in, or on the fringes of, rural Australia.

Book 1 Title: The 2013 Voiceless Anthology
Book Author: J.M. Coetzee et al.
Book 1 Biblio: Allen & Unwin, $22.99 pb, 236 pp, 9781743313305
Book 1 Author Type: Editor
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‘Death has a dual character,’ Zadie Smith writes in her novel The Autograph Man (2002); ‘it seems to be everywhere and nowhere at the same time’. Popular culture is currently awash with cookery programs and diet fads, yet the lives of animals, and the industries that deal in their deaths, have never been more absent from city life. It seems reasonable, therefore, that all ten stories shortlisted for the Voiceless Writing Prize – judged by J.M. Coetzee, Ondine Sherman, Wendy Were, and Susan Wyndham – animate the lives of animals in, or on the fringes of, rural Australia.

Read more: Alex O'Brien reviews 'The 2013 Voiceless Anthology' edited by J.M. Coetzee et al.

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Mike Ladd reviews 1953 by Geoff Page
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Geoff Page’s 1953 is set in the town of Eurandangee, which, we learn, is about 650 kilometres north-west of Sydney ...

Book 1 Title: 1953
Book Author: Geoff Page
Book 1 Biblio: University of Queensland Press, $24.95 pb, 120 pp, 9780702249525
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Geoff Page’s 1953 is set in the town of Eurandangee, which, we learn, is about 650 kilometres north-west of Sydney. There are other locators:

the river, with its governor’s name,
reduced now to a string of pools,

uncertain where to go;
a double shine of railway line
tracking in and stopping.

The river proves to be the Darling and, by my calculation, Eurandangee (if it existed) would be somewhere near Bourke. It is a town of ‘just a dozen blocks’ in wool and wheat country. The season is high summer; it’s 2.30 p.m. on 17 February 1953. The book never moves past that time and date. It is made up of a series of vignettes of the town’s people, observed at precisely this moment. The vignettes alternate between third-person descriptions by an omniscient narrator and named characters providing first-person self-portraits. All are written in finely crafted lines of iambic verse; usually tetrameter or trimeter.

Read more: Mike Ladd reviews '1953' by Geoff Page

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Maya Linden reviews Alex as Well by Alyssa Brugman
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Alyssa Brugman’s Alex as Well makes us question why we read. Is it something we do to escape reality, or are we drawn to other realms that may contain deeply unsettling experiences very different from our own?

Book 1 Title: Alex as Well
Book Author: Alyssa Brugman
Book 1 Biblio: Text Publishing, $19.99 pb, 223 pp, 9781922079237
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Alyssa Brugman’s Alex as Well makes us question why we read. Is it something we do to escape reality, or are we drawn to other realms that may contain deeply unsettling experiences very different from our own?

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Jay Daniel Thompson reviews Speaking Secrets by Sue Joseph
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In Speaking Secrets, academic and journalist Sue Joseph looks at what happens when sex becomes ‘public property’, and interviews a range of Australians who have had often traumatic sex and sexuality-related experiences aired to a wide audience through the media. Some of her interviewees are well known, others are not. Several discuss their experience of sexual abuse, either as a victim or as the relative of a victim. There is an interview with David Cunningham, the Greens candidate who has argued that ‘disabled people need sex lives’. Cunningham (who has cerebral palsy) has stated that people with disabilities should have access to sex workers. There are interviews with the transgender lawyer Rachael Wallbank and the Reverend Dorothy McRae-McMahon, a Uniting Church minister who came out as a lesbian in 1997. In one amusing moment, McRae-McMahon finds herself discussing anal sex during her conversation with Joseph in a Sydney café.Speaking Secrets is situated in the field of literary journalism. Reading Joseph’s evocative prose, the reader almost feels as if he is eavesdropping on the interviews. Still, the author leaves much to the imagination (I will discuss one instance of this). There is not a cliché or a superfluous word in the book.

Book 1 Title: Speaking Secrets
Book 1 Subtitle: Sex and Sexuality as Public Property
Book Author: Sue Joseph
Book 1 Biblio: Alto Books, $24.95 pb, 229 pp, 9781921526183
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In Speaking Secrets, academic and journalist Sue Joseph looks at what happens when sex becomes ‘public property’, and interviews a range of Australians who have had often traumatic sex and sexuality-related experiences aired to a wide audience through the media. Some of her interviewees are well known, others are not. Several discuss their experience of sexual abuse, either as a victim or as the relative of a victim. There is an interview with David Cunningham, the Greens candidate who has argued that ‘disabled people need sex lives’. Cunningham (who has cerebral palsy) has stated that people with disabilities should have access to sex workers. There are interviews with the transgender lawyer Rachael Wallbank and the Reverend Dorothy McRae-McMahon, a Uniting Church minister who came out as a lesbian in 1997. In one amusing moment, McRae-McMahon finds herself discussing anal sex during her conversation with Joseph in a Sydney café.Speaking Secrets is situated in the field of literary journalism. Reading Joseph’s evocative prose, the reader almost feels as if he is eavesdropping on the interviews. Still, the author leaves much to the imagination (I will discuss one instance of this). There is not a cliché or a superfluous word in the book.

Read more: Jay Daniel Thompson reviews 'Speaking Secrets' by Sue Joseph

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