It has been a fantastic year of reading, to the point that the thought of compiling a list of the books I have enjoyed the most is almost too daunting. But I am up for the challenge. As has become tradition around these parts, not all the following books were published this year; some were published in 2014 or even 2013. However, all have had a big impact on me one way or another.
So let’s do this.
Life after Life by Kate Atkinson – what a cracking piece of work this is, and as a reading experience it is sublime. Primarily set in London during the Blitz, Atkinson has her main character Ursula die regularly, often at the end of each chapter. As others have noted, Atkinson’s great achievement with this novel (and at 632 pages it is a whopper) is that we keep caring even though we, as readers, know that we are being toyed with. The writing is just so full of, well, life: humour and wit and intelligence and love. I am very much looking forward to the sequel, A God in Ruins, which apparently is even more extraordinary. Atkinson is a marvel.
Another work that has been getting a lot of international attention is Helen Macdonald’s H is for Hawk. The author’s beloved father has died so she decides to work her way through her grief by training a goshawk. The prose blew me away: like Atkinson (though the tone is very different), each and every one of Macdonald’s sentences is superb. Just open a page and pluck a sentence at random: ‘Sodium lights, dusk, a wall tipped sideways from the vertical and running into the distance; a vanishing point of sallow, stormy sky.’ Yes, superb.
The Golden Age by Joan London has been getting recognised in many of Australia’s highly regarded literary awards, including most recently being shortlisted in the 2015 Prime Minister’s Literary Awards. And so it should. It is a post-World War Two story set in Perth’s Golden Age polio rehabilitation facility for children. With great gentleness, but also with precision, London explores the world of the disease mostly through the eyes of two children, but we are also given a portrait of a migrant family and an exploration of an Australia that is still trying to find itself. So much of this novel lingers after the last page is turned.
In Tom Houghton, Todd Alexander explores the life of a young boy growing up gay in Western Sydney, the bullying he experiences, and the impact this has on him as an older man. What makes this novel remarkable is the linking to Katharine Hepburn’s teenage brother, who died in tragic (and potentially mysterious) circumstances. The interplay between the young and older Tom is beautifully done, and there is an appealing openness and honesty in the prose. Highly recommended.
Sofie Laguna’s The Eye of the Sheep won the 2015 Miles Franklin Award and it is not hard to see why. On the surface, we have been here before: an overweight and long-suffering mother, an abusive father, and a child with special needs. But the story, which is told from the child’s perspective, is artfully done – in a way this novel is a masterclass in voice. It is heartbreaking (in so many ways), but Laguna shows such care for her characters and her words on the page. It bursts with life.
There has been a real buzz around Charlotte Wood’s The Natural Way of Things, and it is more than justified. A fable for our time, a group of young women wake from a drug stupor to find themselves entrapped in some kind of Australian desert prison; the commonality appears to be that they have all suffered some kind of sexual abuse, often in very public ways. This is a truly harrowing story, but it is also an important one: Wood unflinchingly reveals the misogyny that blackens the heart of contemporary Australian life. The Natural Way of Things is going to be all over the awards next year.
A similarly harrowing story is khulud khamis’ Haifa Fragments. Set in the Israeli city of Haifa, khamis refuses to allow her main character to be defined by boundaries. As it says on the cover, ‘Raised a Christian, in a relationship with a Muslim man and enamoured with a Palestinian woman from the Occupied Territories, Maisoon must determine her own path’. Haifa Fragments is a raw and vital piece of work published by Australia’s unstoppable Spinifex Press.
As I write this list I can see a theme emerging: harrowing books that have been artfully written. In My Mother’s Hands by Biff Ward is no different. It opens with ‘There is a grave in my family that was never visited’ and from that moment Ward takes us on a journey through her family, focusing on her mother’s mental illness and its long-term impact. It sounds disturbing, and it is, but Ward’s prose is thoughtfully turned. An important book.
The same could be said for The Anchoress by Robyn Cadwallader. In the thirteenth century, Sarah is seventeen and a holy woman who chooses to be shut away in a small cell attached to a church – for life. In a way, Sarah is like a good-luck charm for the church and the broader society. Cadwallader’s challenge is to bring Sarah to life and have her go on some kind of journey despite being trapped (it is interesting to think of the thematic link between The Anchoress and The Natural Way of Things). Amazingly Cadwallader’s novel is a rich and sensual experience, and the prose is full of compassion – the author does not judge. An original and thought-provoking piece of work.
It has been fascinating to observe the emergence of climate fiction, or ‘cli-fi’, and perhaps the most prominent recent Australian novel in this genre (terrible word), is James Bradley’s Clade. Beginning in a year about now, Bradley takes us through various climate-change scenarios. If that sounds like polemic, it’s not: each interlinked story is very much character driven, and climate issues help to create the world rather than be an overbearing element. Reading Clade is a highly memorable and moving experience – the tone is hopeful and the prose luminescent.
I also enjoyed the wonderfully subtle The Life of Houses by Lisa Gorton, We Are Better Than This, an important and timely collection of essays on Australia’s deplorable asylum-seeker policy (edited by Robyn Cadwallader), Gerald Murnane’s hilarious A Lifetime on Clouds (first published in 1976 but republished in 2013 by Text as part of its Classics series), and the poised poetry of Sarah Holland-Batt in The Hazards.
14 comments
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December 4, 2015 at 9:16+00:00Dec
Gabrielle Bryden
‘artful and harrowing’ sounds good to me 😉
December 4, 2015 at 9:16+00:00Dec
Nigel Featherstone
And good to hear it, Gabe! I should also mention that there’s a fair dose of hope in these books too. All isn’t lost.
December 5, 2015 at 9:16+00:00Dec
Irma Gold
I feel like this could almost be my list for 2015! Eye of the Sheep and The Natural Way of Things both just blew me away. I am still recommending them to everyone. Also absolutely loved H is for Hawk, The Golden Age and The Anchoress. But we part company on Life After Life. My book club did it this year and I found it dull, abandoning it halfway through. But so good to see so many fabulous female authors on your list!
December 5, 2015 at 9:16+00:00Dec
Nigel Featherstone
Irma, I’m glad that there’s so much commonality between our lists. And Wood and the Laguna are magnificent. Though I’m surprised to hear that you didn’t enjoy Life after Life – the concept and structure sure wouldn’t be everyone’s cup of tea, and I could see how some readers would give up, but the wit and attention to detail and the wonderfully drawn characters kept me moving through it. Much to talk about when we catch up very shortly!
December 5, 2015 at 9:16+00:00Dec
Irma Gold
Looking forward to it, as always. But you will not convince me to pick up Life After Life again!
December 6, 2015 at 9:16+00:00Dec
Agnes
I read Clade last week and LOVED it. Still thinking about it even though I’m reading something else now.
Haven’t read anything else on your list though and am now off to check my library’s catalogue and hopefully track some down! Love a good list of book recommendations, thanks Nigel!
December 24, 2015 at 9:16+00:00Dec
Nigel Featherstone
Hi Agnes, Clade is wonderful, isn’t it? Such a thoughtful and original approach to the topic. And, yes, I still think about it too.
December 7, 2015 at 9:16+00:00Dec
Agnes
Just had to pop back again to say I’m three chapters in to ‘H is for Hawk’ and am loving it. You’re right – absolutely gorgeous writing. Every sentence is a jewel.
December 24, 2015 at 9:16+00:00Dec
Nigel Featherstone
Hi again, so glad you’re enjoying ‘H is for Hawk’. I know some readers feel that it’s a little over-cooked, but I thought it was – to push the geology metaphor – a polished gem.
December 7, 2015 at 9:16+00:00Dec
Margaret Innes
Reading ‘Life after Life’ made me think of the final line from Joyce Johnson’s Minor Characters, her memoir on her relationship with Jack Kerouac. “If time were like a passage of music, you could keep going back to it till you got it right.” Maybe ‘Life after Life’ is, in an inverse, roundabout way, about regret. It was a fine read but maybe – if you’ll forgive my disagreement – a bit too long. Sometimes Kate Atkinson can write too much. The standout read for me this year was Elena Ferrante’s My Brilliant Friend. All good books.
December 24, 2015 at 9:16+00:00Dec
Nigel Featherstone
Hi Marg, sorry for the delayed reply. I’ll track down ‘Minor Characters’ – sounds fascinating. And, yes, ‘Life after Life’ may have been a bit too long, but perhaps she was just having too much fun (despite the subject matter). The Ferrante is fantastic, isn’t it – I had that on my list last year; now to read the rest in the series. All best to you.
December 26, 2015 at 9:16+00:00Dec
whisperinggums
I don’t believe this – how did I get unsubscribed from your blog. I thought you’d stopped writing it? I’m mad, mad, mad!
Great list, btw, Nigel – so many books here I’ve been meaning to read, a couple I actually have but haven’t read (yet), and one or two I actually have read. Your taste is excellent as usual.
December 26, 2015 at 9:16+00:00Dec
Nigel Featherstone
Hi Sue, lovely to hear from you.
Let’s blame gremlins! But I’m certainly not writing as regularly for the blog – about once a month. I still dip into yours (though I don’t comment as much, as you’d know); I’m just amazed at your output – extraordinary (and appreciated).
Thanks for your thoughts on the books listed above. Have you read the Atkinson? If so, it’d be great to know what you thought of it.
All the best for your 2016.
December 26, 2015 at 9:16+00:00Dec
whisperinggums
Thanks Nigel. I’m just gobsmacked that you’ve kept going and I didn’t know. I’ve been hearing about you via other sources, including the HARD COPY program, but not knowing you were still blogging? How did that happen.
As for Atkinson, no I haven’t. I believe I have an e-version of it, and have heard such good things about it, but my reading this year has been very erratic, and at frustratingly low levels.
Here’s to a great 2016 for you too.