Risky
proximity 
Delia Falconer
Cate
Kennedy
Dark Roots
Scribe, $28.95 pb, 192 pp, 1920769994
Cate
Kennedys name will be familiar to anyone who takes even
the vaguest interest in Australian short story contests. Over
the last decade, she has racked up an impressive list of awards
in regional competitions, but readers are most likely to have
noticed her successes in two of the most high-profile ones. In
2001 she took out the prestigious and now-defunct HQ Magazine
short story competition; and in 2000 and 2001, two Age
short story competitions back-to-back. With such a strong recognition
factor, it seems like a smart move by Scribe to publish her first
collection. Not only should it appeal to readers looking for new
short fiction of established quality, but also, presumably, to
the thousands of writers who enter short story competitions each
year and who wish to see the gold standard.
What strikes one immediately, on opening this collection, is the
intensely local setting of its stories: a hospital ward, a street
outside a coffee shop, a council flat, a football night in front
of the television. Kennedys realist eye is unpretentious,
drawn to domestic moments that teeter on the edge of change. In
Resize, a couple whose relationship is on the brink
drive to a jeweller to have their wedding rings resized. In A
Pitch Too High for the Human Ear, an ageing basketballer
finds solace on his nightly jogs through the suburban backblocks
with his dog. In Dark Roots, a forty-year-old woman
with a twenty-six-year-old lover faces herself in the bathroom
mirror as she begins to take the pill again.
Yet, while these premises may suggest an almost American sensibility,
Kennedy avoids the length of exposition that distinguishes much
of the contemporary short fiction coming out of places such as
the Iowa Writers Workshop. Nor is she interested in its
complexity and exactitude regarding markers of class, geography
or presentness. Instead, her stories are more like short plays
or monologues that depend upon an underlying dramatic concept
as they focus on the truth of an instant.
The presence shimmering behind a number of the stories
though never fetishised is Melbourne: the Camberwell markets,
a T-shirt factory in Smith Street, Marios on Brunswick Street.
However, the range of characters whose lives Kennedy briefly spotlights
against suburbs or urban fringe is broad: a Vietnamese refugee;
a cocaine smuggler; a drifting student; a caterer making soup
for her sick girlfriend; an environmental activist; a vengeful,
pickle-making housewife. Frequently, we glimpse these characters
at moments where life hovers on the point of tipping toward emotional
or physical disaster.
Of these stories, Cold Snap is the standout. A simple
boy invokes the countryside around him with a sense of kinship
learned from hunting rabbits (rabbit fur, he tells us, smells
like lichen or dry moss). It allows the reader to
glimpse a much bigger narrative at the edges of the boys
small world. This is a town on the edge of a tree change. The
newcomers attracted to the rural landscape will set out to destroy
it. Because the child, like his old house, is doomed to become
a rustic oddity, his instinctive act of revenge resonates beyond
the storys frame.
In Seizure, another strong story, a woman watches
a stranger care for an epileptic man as he convulses outside a
café, and becomes obsessed by this act of kindness. Observing
the lack of tenderness in her own relationship, she contemplates
the other little bads (playing on the term petit mal)
in life. The Correct Names of Things, in which a woman
describes her part-time work as a student in a Chinese restaurant,
conjures up what it was like to come of age in the 1980s, and
the freer choices the decade offered.
Unfortunately, few of the other stories in Dark Roots approach
this amplitude, casting beyond themselves to snag on something
greater. The majority feel too neatly turned: steered efficiently
toward their epiphanies, and reined in tightly just as they appear
ready to take off. This is in part due to their brevity, which
may have been dictated by competition word lengths, but seems
more the result of being unable to allow for the divagations of
reality within a tidiness of concept. A sense of carefulness is
compounded by Kennedys precise, even prose style, in which
a scrupulous attention to detail overrides variations in tone.
In the end, in spite of their different narrators, these stories
seem to share the same somewhat restrained consciousness that
is watch-ful, articulate and controlled.
This is the problem with collections. Placed together, stories
can rub together to create chemistry and a cumulative sense of
life, but the risk is that their proximity can reveal
shared flaws. While Kennedys stories pay brief, clear-eyed
attention to ordinary moments of potential poetry, they seem,
taken together, to be missing the messiness, verve and veering
joy that are also part of life.
Delia
Falconer's novels include The Lost Thoughts of Soldiers (2005).
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