Not
everything worth reading is hot off the press. In this section, we recommend "something old" that is still well worth
reading. "Something Old" can mean anything from a venerable and antique
classic to a good book first published four or more years ago.
“BREAKWATER” by Kate Duignan (first
published in 2001; republished as a “VUP Classic” by Victoria University Press
in 2018; $NZ30)
Earlier
this year I had the pleasure of reading Kate Duignan’s newly-published and very
accomplished novel The New Ships.
While I had heard of the novelist, I had not up to that point read any of her
work. Then, a few weeks ago, through the post there came an interesting
collection of review copies from Victoria University Press. They were three
books in the press’s new “VUP Classics” series – re-prints of work that has
earlier appeared under the VUP imprint. I was sent new impressions of Bruce
Mason’s famous dramatic monologue The End
of the Golden Weather (first published 1962), of Bill Manhire’s poetry
collection Lifted (first published
2005) and of Kate Duignan’s first novel Breakwater
(first published 2001).
Having
admired The New Ships, I at once
pounced on Breakwater and read it. Kate
Duignan is also known for her short-stories, but I was surprised to discover
that Breakwater was her only novel
before The New Ships. So there was a
seventeen-year gap between them. Had Duignan’s central concerns changed between
these two works? I think not, for in both she is essentially interested in
matters of family relationships and parenthood, but the focus has shifted a little.
Breakwater is set exclusively in New
Zealand (mainly Wellington), whereas in The
New Ships, Duignan is also interested in New Zealand’s connections with
Europe.
But
enough of these redundant comparisons. Considered in its own right, Breakwater is a very assured account of
stresses placed on two women who have become single mothers.
Ella
is a biology and zoology student, aged about 20, who gets pregnant, decides to
keep the baby, but does not want to stay with the baby’s father, who is a
decent and concerned enough bloke with whom she remains on reasonably good
terms. So she’s into the life of a young, single mother trying to finish her
degree and survive without a partner. If Duignan were a lesser writer, what
follows for Ella could have become a tract on the travails of the single
mother. We get a realistic account of the young woman’s morning sickness and
cravings and realisation that she shouldn’t drink or smoke while pregnant.
There’s the delicate matter of what she should say to her family, who live up
near Gisborne. More important, there’s the problem of where she and the baby
will be able to live and how she will afford child-care. And there is a very
realistic scene of the pains of childbirth.
But
this is no tract. Ella is a credible and contradictory character, wanting her
independence but knowing she will have to rely on others. We are never incited
to wag the finger at society for not addressing a “social problem”, as the
people Ella encounters are, in the main, as helpful as circumstances allow.
This
is where the other single mother comes in. Through Tessa, a fellow student,
Ella is introduced into the home of Tessa’s middle-aged mother Louise, who is
willing to let Ella and her baby board with her. Louise is single because her
useless and abusive husband disappeared years previously. On her own she has
raised her young-adult children, Tessa and Jacob, while running a restaurant.
So there is a relationship and a contrast between two women of different ages.
In Louise there is some wistful nostalgia for lost opportunites in her life
(she sometimes tries to read canonical literature to “improve” herself). There
is certainly a practical business sense and a desire to make her own way in the
world. But there is also much instinctive maternal feeling.
I
have made this seem much more patterned and formulaic than the novel is.
Duignan’s chief achievement in Breakwater
is her ability to set both Ella and Louise in a credible context – and that
means creating interaction with many other believable characters. Tessa’s brother Jacob is a general arts
student, moody and apparently manic-depressive, who hangs out with a guy called
Chris, a law student who has been favoured by Jacob’s mum because he has such
nice manners. But both Jacob and Chris are filled out in detailed back-stories
which give a very nuanced sense of how two young men can be close friends but
also essentially so different in character. Louise’s brother Kevin seems a
blokey bloke, a laconic professional fisherman without a family – yet in the
event showing more empathy for others than we at first realise. Dare I say that
this is a novel by a woman, and mainly about women, which does not make a case
by denigrating males? Some males in Breakwater
do reprehensible things, or at least things which have negative consequences
for others – but they are seen to have their motives and a display degree of
genuine remorse (NB genuine remorse - not the type of remorse that the
convicted display in courtrooms).
I
see Duignan’s narrative skill most in a birthday party scene, involving many
characters – including a number of minor and peripheral one. The reader never
gets lost in the cross-talk and hasty connections made in such a situation,
because Duignan has taken the care to flesh out her characters and in the
process make them easily identifiable.
At
this point, however, I hit the brick wall that I often hit when reviewing new
novels. When writing the “Something Old” sections of this blog, I am often
happy to reveal all the developments of a plot on the understanding that the
book in question is probably already well-known. In the case of Breakwater, however, even though it is a
reprint, I am more inclined to treat it as I would a new novel. And I believe
it is not reasonable to give away its major turning-point – although,
regrettably, the blurb-writer for this new impression does just that.
Suffice
it to say that almost exactly at mid-point, where Part One becomes Part Two,
something traumatic happens in Louise’s family which places even more stress on
her, her children and Ella. How all characters react to this brings their
motives and concern for others under even closer scrutiny. The trauma is
treated by Duignan as unsentimentally and realistically as everything that has
gone before it, and we understand why two characters in particular have been
developed in such detail earlier in the novel.
Breakwater is a well-written novel which I would criticise in
one particular only. Towards the end, there appears to be some strain in tying
it and all its characters together, so that both Louise and Ella reach a neat
point of reconciliation with their lives – a symbolic closure. This seems a
little pat, even if we have been shown how resilient both women are. Even so,
this is an engaging and carefully crafted novel.
Frivolous footnote: I spent some time trying to figure out the full significance of the
novel’s title, Breakwater. I
understand there is a literal breakwater mentioned a number of times, and this
is also the name of the restaurant where Louise works. Perhaps the roaring sea
is relevant, and one of the “improving” books Louise tries is Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse. I thought maybe a breakwater represented a
parting of ways in life – just as a breakwater divides the incoming waves. But
then another thought occurred – is it also a reference to the breaking of
waters before childbirth? I really do not know.