Modern Australian
Men's Weekly

.

two new Australian novels fail to achieve their literary ambitions

  • Written by Sally Breen, Senior Lecturer in Writing and Publishing, Griffith University
two new Australian novels fail to achieve their literary ambitions

The covers of two new Australian novels, Hydra and Faithless, play into a current design trend in Australian publishing. Faceless women in various states of melodramatic distress – either flung over furniture, or pictured against blurred or monochromatic backgrounds. Arms, hands or long, dishevelled hair conceal their faces. It’s a trend spurred on, no doubt, by the runaway success of Meg Mason’s Sorrow and Bliss.

Review: Hydra – Adriane Howell (Transit Lounge) and Faithless – Alice Nelson (Vintage)

These are our new literary damsels, more muted in their elegant colour-coordinated breakdowns than their Hollywood golden age predecessors. The design did not suit the outrageously funny tone of Mason’s novel, but works well enough here as a portent. In Hydra, of an interior descent into mania. In Faithless, of longing in a decidedly calming shade of forest green.

Read more: 'Painful, confronting and totally riveting': Peggy Frew's novel of dysfunctional sisters is ultimately uplifting

Hydra’s ‘unhinged’ heroine

We first meet Anja, the heroine of Hydra, on her first day back at work in the high-end, cut-throat world of antique dealing, after a disastrous trip to the titular Greek island – where her marriage has seemingly fallen apart.

We will not know why, nor get to those scenes, for another 140 pages – one in a series of structural missteps that will test the contract between writer and reader. Not knowing these details for so long effects our ability to fully understand Anja’s subsequent “unhinged” behaviour, or realise the island doesn’t, in the end, have much significance to this novel at all. Instead, Hydra refers to an Australian naval base: the HMAS Hydra, somewhere on the south coast of Victoria. Anja takes up a 100-year lease on a beach cottage there after being cast out of the antiques world for acting like a crazy woman. Initially, we roll with the refreshingly bad behaviour, as Anja goes to war with her ambitious, delightfully brassy underling Fran at Geoffrey Brown Auction House. Howell conjures this world well and it’s shame we move away from it so quickly, though we do understand why. The unforgivable act that closes out chapter two (and leads to Anja’s ejection from the antiques world) hits the reader hard: a poor old dame selling off her son’s estate ends up with a smashed coccyx, thanks to Anja’s actions. We strap ourselves in ready for more of the same. Howell is very good at keeping the reader on their toes and this novel is never dull. Major plot points explode like hand grenades as the hybrid narrative shifts between Anja’s highwire point of view, investigative reports from HMAS Hydra’s archives, and other assorted documents presented literally in the text. Despite a building sense of confusion and disbelief, we keep going. Read more: The book that changed me: falling for Eve Babitz's Sex and Rage Big cat mystery The central mystery of this book is a cat. A big one. From the moment Anja first moves into the cottage, strange things start happening. Shit and dead animals left on her windblown porch, yellow eyes in the trees, a disquieting aura of being watched and hounded. At first, we’re not sure who or what is responsible for these trespasses that have Anja rushing home before nightfall and sleeping with a knife under her bed. Gradually, we learn the HMAS Hydra was gifted a cougar by their American allies. As more and more information is revealed to either counter or support the suggestion of a supernatural presence, we oscillate between beliefs. Is the cat real, a figment of her unravelling mind, a haunting, or the result of some sort of sinister naval experiment? Adriane Howell’s novel, Hydra, is ‘never dull’, but takes too many implausible leaps. By the time we hit the last third of the novel, we’re in a whirling dervish of jump scares – not rendered entirely successfully. The balance between plausibility and mystery stretches beyond breaking point. In a pivotal scene, where Anja’s unravelling really begins to take hold, a giant navy vessel visible from her house, grounded for decades, is struck by a bolt of lightning in an intense storm. It sinks in a matter of minutes. Anja abruptly falls asleep. In another, after getting sloshed to calm her mind, Anja clambers down the huge cliff face, glass in hand. She cuts her hand and leaps off a rock into the ocean – where she contemplates suicide for a while, clambers out again, can’t find her way back up, leaps onto some more rocks, smashes her teeth in, then lies on her back and laughs manically. She spends the rest of the novel walking around toothless. Conceptually, each twist and turn might be justified, but we lose all sense of narrative security – and our confidence that Howell is adequately guiding us out of the eye of this adrenaline-fuelled storm falters. In the end, like Anja, we’re asked to take too many implausible leaps. Read more: Barbara Trapido's 'undeniably sexy' novel of academic bohemia still dazzles at 40 Faithless – a ‘questionable plot’ Take away all the literary allusions and carefully constructed prose and the plot of Faithless, by two-time novelist Alice Nelson, skates very close to highly commercial romance. Max – a famous, handsome, married, middle-aged writer – meets Cressida, a beautiful young English girl, on her family’s estate in India. It’s recently been converted into a boutique hotel, due to her dead daddy’s mishandling of money. Their affair continues for decades, as she burrows away in her garret back in England working on translations, meeting Max for “clandestine liaisons” where they spend more hours wandering in gardens “rampant with the smell of wisteria” and quoting Goethe and Proust to each other than they do having sex. Until along comes the “vastly generous” Leo – another handsome man who relieves her of her money troubles, so she can finally write and become fabulously famous and rich herself. The to and fro between Leo and Max continues until fate decides for them all – and Cressida heads to the village town of Dunwich, where Max once lived, to mooch about in her memories under “listless” skies by “roiling” seas, accompanied by the mysterious orphan Clara. Any potential entertainment value offered by this questionable plot is further weakened by its delivery – everything has already happened and is being told to us. Cressida is writing one long letter to her dead lover Max: “Oh we had delight Max, hour after hour of pure pleasure.” These second-person sections are framed by shorter scenes in contemporary Dunwich, where nothing much happens. This structural decision means the grand love affair, the “all consuming” love Cressida feels for Max, is rendered passionless in recall. Alice Nelson’s novel about literature ‘operates in a rarefied world I do not believe or recognise’, says Sally Breen. Nicole Boenig-McGrade Max is also, unfortunately, a pretentious cad. The first time he kisses Cressida doesn’t happen until page 91. And he tends to accompany each kiss or interaction with her with a quote, such as, “Now no discourse, except it be of love.” (From Shakespeare’s Two Gentlemen of Verona.) A similar loftiness inhabits the prose, where even the sex (what little there is of it) is strangely sexless and cliched. On Sunday we woke early, just as the sun was rising in a vast plume of orange above the mountains. We made love slowly, with a tenderness that made me want to weep. You stared down at me as if you were gazing at something extraordinary, something slightly bewildering. It was always the face I believed most revealed you. Max; the one you turned to me as you rose above me in bed. If this is a book about love and literature, it operates in a rarefied world I do not believe or recognise. Perhaps I’ve seen a guy like Max wandering around a writer’s festival: a lavender cashmere sweater draped around his shoulders, his long-suffering, much younger mistress drinking in his lame references to dead white males. Maybe, but that image is also cliched. Neither the plot nor the writing is up to the literary ambition that defines this novel. Endless quotes and allusions to the greatness of others cannot save it. Authors: Sally Breen, Senior Lecturer in Writing and Publishing, Griffith University

Read more https://theconversation.com/damsels-in-distress-two-new-australian-novels-fail-to-achieve-their-literary-ambitions-187089

Best Ways to Trade In Your Old Tech for Cash in Australia

Upgrading your mobile is exciting, but many Australians are left wondering what to do with the device they no longer use. Instead of leaving it in a...

Why Doctors in Bundoora Play an Important Role in Community Health

Access to quality healthcare is essential for maintaining a healthy lifestyle and managing medical conditions effectively. Visiting experienced doctor...

Backyard Aesthetics Decoded: Mediterranean, Coastal, Retro, Rustic, and Beyond

Backyard design has come a long way from a patch of lawn, a barbecue in the corner, and a few chairs chosen purely for practicality. Today, outdoor ...

What Stops a Home From Feeling Flat-Pack Generic

There is nothing wrong with convenience. Flat-pack furniture, fast styling decisions, and online checkouts have made it easier than ever to furnish ...

5 Best Dental Clinics in Beecroft, NSW

The best dental clinics in Beecroft, NSW are Beecroft Smiles Dental Surgery, Beecroft Elegant Dental Clinic, McConnell Dental, Dentistry for Life, a...

Executive Recruitment: Finding Leadership Talent That Drives Organisational Success

Hiring the right leadership team can significantly influence the direction and performance of any organisation. Strong executives bring strategic thin...

Understanding the Importance of Abrasive Blasting in Industrial Surface Preparation

Surface preparation is an essential step in many industrial processes. Whether preparing metal structures, removing old coatings, or cleaning equipmen...

Farm Machinery Costs Set to Rise

With steep rises in fuel prices and the need for specialised maintenance, farm machinery costs are set to rise across Australia. The need for transpor...

Why an Employer Recruitment Agency Helps Businesses Build Stronger Teams

Finding the right employees is one of the most important responsibilities for any organisation. Businesses rely on skilled professionals who can con...

Why Quality Trailers Are Essential for Transport and Trade Businesses

Transportation plays a major role in industries ranging from construction and landscaping to logistics and agriculture. Businesses that frequently m...

Why Professional Car Removal Services Are The Best Way To Dispose Of Unwanted Vehicles

When a vehicle reaches the end of its useful life, owners often face the challenge of deciding how to remove it safely and responsibly. Old vehicles...

Why Professional Commercial Carpet Cleaning Matters for Modern Workspaces

Clean office environments influence how employees work, how clients perceive a business, and how long workplace interiors last. Carpets in commercia...

Why Hiring Removalists Makes Moving Easier And More Efficient

Relocating to a new home or office can be an exciting yet demanding experience. Packing belongings, organising transport, and ensuring that items ar...

The Importance of Hiring Local Lawyers in Melbourne for Business Protection

When it comes to protecting a business, the legal support you choose matters just as much as the decisions you make day to day. Working with lawyers...

Why Packaging Boxes Are Important for Product Protection and Logistics

Packaging plays a crucial role in modern commerce, ensuring that products are transported safely from manufacturers to consumers. One of the most wide...

Best Practices for Promoting Crypto Payment Options to Your Customers

Promoting crypto payment options is no longer a futuristic concept but a present-day strategy for venues aiming to reduce transaction costs, attract a...

What Is Allocated vs Unallocated Gold?

Gold has been a trusted store of value for thousands of years, prized for its rarity, durability, and universal recognition. Even in the modern financ...

Physiotherapy Strategies for Improving Independence in Daily Living

For many individuals living with permanent and significant disabilities, the concept of "independence" is not about a total absence of support, but ra...