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Profile
"Nobody's Perfect"
- by Angela Bennie, Sydney Morning Herald
"To be alone, secretive, a presser of my palm to glass panes, looking out at life": this is an image of women that recurs in Kate Grenville's work, a sad quatrain to the female state: and it is an image of woman that lies like an archaeological trace beneath so many of her stories' surfaces.
It is a surprising image, in many ways, for Grenville, who in life appears so open and outreaching in her relationship to the world. No pressing of the palms for her, but an open-hearted embrace would seem to be the Grenville trope for life.
Yet her stories focus on women peering out at the world - more often than not at men, but equally, at choice - from behind glass panes, if not literally then psychologically or metaphorically: and it is her Joan in Joan Makes History - the writing of history from a woman's point of view she was commissioned in 1988 to do as a Bicentenary project - who actually spells out the condition. As Grenville writes her, Joan as Everywoman emerges as both an outsider in history and an insider locked away in the fabric of history; though active, rarely acknowledged, written to the margins.
Grenville first came to wide critical attention with Lilian's Story in 1984, when it won the Vogel Australian Award for best unpublished novel (it was published the next year, to much acclaim), a story about an outside/insider based on the estranged, eccentric, bizarre life of Bee Miles.
The year before, her short-story collection, Bearded Ladies, was published - and another unpublished novel, Dreamhouse, about the removed, isolated nature of a couple's marriage, was the runner-up for that year's Vogel prize.
Dreamhouse went on to be published in 1986: and Grenville's place as a writer interested in oddities, eccentricities of personality, internal subjective states at odds with the external appearances, was established.
She was not to write another novel for 10 years. And when that novel did appear, it brought with it a shock. Dark Places was a troubling, uneven, irregular retelling of Lilian's story, but this time it was the story from inside the mind of Lilian's molester and rapist, her father, Albion Gidley Singer.
In this dark place it was now the male sensibility she was reaching for, but a predatory one, which, if it did indeed look through any glass, it was through it darkly, and with arrogance.
The book, though the reading of it was a disturbing experience for many, was shortlisted for the 1995 Miles Franklin Award (in one of those strange ironies, it was pipped at the post by a novel that indeed had come from a dark place, Helen Demidenko's The Hand that Signed the Paper) and it won that year's Victorian Premier's Literary Award.
But Grenville's surprise return journey to Lilian's Story of 10 years before is significant in terms of what was happening to her as a writer.
Where she had begun with the female gaze through the window-pane, she was now just as preoccupied with what was on the other side of the glass, looking in onto and affecting that consciousness. She realised there were two figures in the Grenville frame - polarised, isolated, separate, positioned on either side of the glass - but, nevertheless, two.
The Idea of Perfection, which hits the bookshops next week, is Grenville's latest novel. It follows swiftly on the heels of Dark Places, as if on wings. It is a love story.
"One day I came across a quote of Leonardo da Vinci's which set the hairs of the back of my neck on end," says Grenville. "He says: an arch is two weaknesses which together make a strength.
"I had been interested in bridges. I am interested in women painters and I was fascinated that a lot of them - Grace Cossington Smith is perhaps the most well-known, but there were many others, Dorrit Black, Jessie Traill - who often used unfinished bridges as their subject matter, especially the Harbour Bridge when it was under construction.
"I was interested in why women should be interested in this image - why were they using this . . . I was thinking of writing something about this. And then I came across the quote from da Vinci . . . I suddenly saw it is a description of a relationship. If you were perfect, you wouldn't need one, you couldn't love. But it is because of our weaknesses that we are able to; when you put the weaknesses up against each other, the stresses and strains are their strength. What this means is that the more the two parts of the arch lean against each other, the stronger it is. I suddenly knew I had a book. I suddenly knew I had a love story."
The Idea of Perfection tells the story of two ungainly, awkward people, Harley Savage and Douglas Cheeseman, who collide together through chance, and who gradually overcome their differences and learn to love.
"I deliberately made the two characters imperfect and all too aware of their imperfections, haunted by them, in fact. And what they come to realise is that their imperfections are what gives the relationship, the love that grows between them, its strength."
What is interesting in this new development for Grenville - "yes, it's the first love story I have written, and, oh, the joy of it, the pleasure of it, to write about love after all that darkness" - is that it could not have happened without that journey she took back into the darkness.
"Perhaps some will say it is a reaction to Dark Places. But . . . I see it as part of a process. I had to look into the dark, and having looked at the dark, now I want to find out how to incorporate the light with it.
"So one of the juxtaposition I play with in this book is light and dark . . . Now I am interested in balancing the two.
"It is now a marvellous thing to be able to handle two people who come together. Up to now, I have always been conscious of what drives men and women apart. For me, this book is just the next logical step in my writing."
Yet what is also interesting about Grenville's writing process is that it is the principle of illogicality that governs it.
"It is like quilting," she says. "It is a question of putting together things which don't necessarily, on the face of it, have any overt relationship, or value, but something happens when you put it all together.
"I am always writing these fragments of ideas down: they fill my notebooks. When I begin to write the book I write them down on pieces of paper, those Post-it notes, and stick them up on the window and move them around and around into patterns and rearrange them until I feel they fit together. Then something extraordinary happens.
"The plot and the structure of the book grow into a whole. I allow my unconscious to play with the pieces and, putting the fragments up on the window like that, allowing the material to behave in its own way, the whole emerges."
It is a powerful image of the writer she gives - standing at her window pane, moving her fragments around into patterns with her hands - perhaps her reflection is looking back at her on the glass - while the story, the world outside its backdrop, slowly crystallises before her into structure and form.
"Because in a way, the material is buried there in you," she says. "Unconsciously you have chosen this subject all the way along the line, right from the beginning. You just have to allow the process to work itself out and that becomes the structure. That becomes the writing. Then you have your book."
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