Sea Hearts by Margo Lanagan

Why are the books we love most the hardest to review?

During the course of this year’s reading, I’ve come across a number of outstanding books by Australian women (or women who, at some point, have lived and written in Australia): Eva Hornung’s Dog Boy, Charlotte Wood’s Animal People, Kirsty Eagar’s Raw Blue, Cath Crowley’s Graffiti Moon and M J Hyland’s Carry Me Down. Each of these books moved me profoundly, mostly emotionally, but also to some degree intellectually.

Of the above books, so far I’ve only managed to review Dog Boy, and that only because I was challenged to by another book blogger.

For the others, I made excuses. It was too soon; I needed to process my reaction more. Or how could I do the book justice? Or – hasn’t it been reviewed enough already? Or it was too long since I’d read it: I’d have to read it again. Anything but face the painful task of putting into words what is was about a book that ripped my heart out.

My recent (re)discovery that I’d signed up for the Aussie Author challenge has prompted me to give some of these books another go – starting with Margo Lanagan’s Sea Hearts, or Brides of Rollrock Island, as it’s known in the UK.

You know when you’ve found a great book when you not only remember it months later, but also want to fork out hard-earned cash to buy your own copy, instead of re-borrowing from the library. Sea Hearts is such a book for me. It’s the kind I can imagine dipping into at random simply to savour the words, as I do with poetry – because Lanagan’s prose is among the most memorable and evocative that I’ve ever read.

Sea Hearts is a devastating book. Mixing history and myth, it weaves a story of an island and the fisher folk who inhabit it. The fishermen fall in love with Selkies, beautiful, seemingly docile women who are “sung” by magic from seals. The tragedy for the fishermen is the same as for the Selkies and the fisherwomen whom they replace: the Selkies may be every man’s desire, but at the cost of their true, “sea” nature. Eventually, they must return to the sea or die.

The genesis of the story, Lanagan says in a video for publisher Allen and Unwin, was the idea of knitting a blanket out of seaweed. Why would someone do this? What would it represent?

In answer, Lanagan created Misskaela, the half-Selkie, half-human “witch” who sings the Selkies – as women – into being. The structure of the novel is episodic, a series of short stories or fragments rather than a novel,  and portrays various points of view over several generations with Misskaela’s story at its core. Whereas in less skilled hands such a structure might detract from the reader’s ability to follow the story and care about the characters, Lanagan’s execution is near flawless. Misskaela is the unhappy key figure against which all the others’ stories are referenced, and her story gives the book its heart-breaking climax.

Sea Heart has been extensively reviewed for the AWW challenge, including by Lizabelle, Literary Minded, Krissy Kneen, Astrid, Sue Luus, Dark Matter Fanzine, Coleen Kwan, Mark Webb, Jason Nahrung and at Adventures of a Bookonaut (NB: this list has been revised: please let me know if there are more I missed).

I know why: it’s one of the stand-out AWW reads for 2012.

~

This review counts as Book 2 in my Aussie Author Challenge 2012 and my ongoing commitment to read books by Australian women for the Australian Women Writers Challenge.

Aussie Author Challenge 2012

At the beginning of the year, while still a blogging novice, I joined up to more than one reading and reviewing challenge. Then, in March, I suffered the great computer crash and lost a good portion of my data, not retrieved until June.

Luckily, I’d already finished the Australian Women Writer’s Challenge, but I never made my way back to the other challenge. Instead, I continued to read books by Australian women, and posted sporadic reviews on GoodReads.

Earlier this week I rediscovered the Aussie Author Challenge 2012, the site which prompted me to use Mr Linky for the AWW challenge. It has inspired me to post some more reviews, including some from my GoodReads page. I’ve started with a recent one, Y A Erkine’s The Betrayal.

My goal is “DINKY-DI – Read and review 12 books by at least 6 different Australian authors.”

1. Y A Erskine, The Betrayal.

2. Margo Lanagan, Sea Hearts.

3. Meg Mundell, Black Glass.

4. P M Newton, The Old School.

5. Angela Savage, The Half-Child.

6.Emily Maguire, Fishing for Tigers.

7. Toni Jordan, Fall Girl.

8. Lisa Heidke, Stella Makes Good.

9. Lynne Leonhardt, Finding Jasper.

10. Caroline Overington, Sisters of Mercy.

11. Kate Morton, The Secret Keeper.

12. Kate Forsyth, Bitter Greens.

The Betrayal by Y A Erskine: a scathing insight

This novel is well told, but populated by a cast of highly unlikeable, often misogynistic characters that, by the end, made me feel angry and unsettled. The scenario is interesting; its insight into police, media and political cultures in Hobart scathing. Whereas in Erskine’s debut novel, The Brotherhood, I felt I had someone to cheer for, in this I didn’t, not even Lucy, the cadet who instigates the investigation that forms the basis of the novel’s plot. Her behaviour, for a police officer, seems naive in the extreme.

That stated, I found the story compelling in the way that I find accidents and political scandals compelling. (I can take both in very small doses.) The book’s shortcoming – for want of a better word – is the structure, the consecutive points of view, a style which in The Brotherhood I found riveting.* Here it detracts from creating reader empathy for the book’s main character, Lucy, whose fate we’re meant to care for.

Another reader who reviewed this for the Australian Women Writers challenge, Shelleyrae of Book’dout blog, found it an excellent read.

* Erskine’s debut novel, The Brotherhood, recently shared the 2012 “Reader’s Choice” Davitt Award with Jaye Ford’s Beyond Fear.

This is Book 1 of my Aussie Author 2012 Challenge.