My Hard Heart: Selected Fiction
by Helen Garner
My rating: 4 out of 5 stars
Although hard going in parts, the anthology's looming sense of inertia typifies a suburban Australian mindset of not long ago or even today, where intellect feels futile and family or mateship comes first. The combined greasy despondency and simmering tetchiness across the stories captures something as fundamentally Australian as its weather, if you can muster the grit to sit through it. This seems to be Garner's intended effect and, as always with this author, she nails it magnificently.
So, in some ways these pieces struck me as cathartic exercises, a soul-baring foundation of much great modern literature.
I was compelled to keep reading, with the timelessness of her human dilemmas loud and clear throughout.
Helen Garner hardly needs my validation after her achievements. A notable Australian literary behemoth, one must admire her work's longevity in such a fast-changing scene. Whilst she has been criticised by some for merely 'transcribing her diary material into fictional form', in her defence it needs reiterating that autobiographical fiction is the chosen genre of some of the greatest writers of all time. Raw truth punches harder, for many including this reader, than even the most elaborately contrived story plotting, character arcs and formulism of much popular fiction.
My quest for home grown Aussie writers to embrace continues. Thank you, Helen Garner, for earning your place near the top of my list.
You are among our very best, always.
No comments:
Post a Comment