New Zealand Listener – June 01, 2019

(Steven Felgate) #1
Part one of the book ends with Dead
Papa walking through the village, “whis-
tling his dream into being”. He slides
into homes via the plumbing to listen.
Part two slides between unnamed
characters, and feverishly plays with
perspectives. Lanny goes missing, and

LU


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light on modern problems. Frankissstein
alternates two storylines. The first is a
fictional account of the 1816 summer
Mary and Percy Shelley spent at Lake
Geneva with Lord Byron, his mistress
and his physician, notorious at the time
for its reported sexual promiscuity. This
was, of course, when Mary conceived
the premise of what became her 1818

novel Frankenstein: A Modern Prometheus,
published when she was just 20.
Winterson recounts the story from
Mary’s point of view, giving us a pic-
ture of an iconoclastic young woman
who understands the foibles of those
around her, particularly Byron. The
atmosphere, made darkly surreal by the
rain and copious alcohol, is masterfully
evoked, and despite the odd, unnecessary
injection of factual information, Mary’s
story of becoming a creative individual
in her own right is both gripping and
convincing.
Less successful is the second storyline.

Set in the present, it opens at a robotics
expo in Memphis, Tennessee. This time,
our protagonist is trans gender doctor Ry
Shelley, and all the other characters are
modern takes on those from 1816. They
include Ron Lord, a wide-boy sex-bot
creator, and Victor Stein, an artificial-
intelligence expert who has many secrets,
including some he’s buried underground.
Unlike the first part, the second seems
tonally off. It has many funny moments


  • Lord’s sex-bot sales pitch is tremendous:
    “Amazing! Like a Brompton bicycle!” But
    mostly, it’s too much of a spoof for us to
    engage fully with the characters, and the
    valid points about what makes us human
    are lost because they’re hammered home
    with a squeaky rubber joke mallet. The
    climax and its denouement have all the
    subtle horror of a Scooby-Doo cartoon.
    Which is a shame, because Winterson
    is a terrific writer with a formidable intel-
    ligence. If she had sustained even some
    of the mood and
    dignity of the first
    storyline through-
    out, this novel
    would be, pardon
    the pun, frankly
    superb. l
    FRANKISSSTEIN, by
    Jeanette Winterson
    ($35, Jonathan Cape)


Ron Lord’s sex-bot sales
pitch is tremendous:
“Amazing! Like a

Brompton bicycle!”


Porter’s navigation of Jolie’s shock and
grief is raw. Predictably, ugliness quickly
fouls this parasitical little community.
The village gaze falls on Pete as a suspect
and sympathy for Lanny’s loss turns into
malicious gossip.
Part three takes on a hallucinogenic
hue with Dead Papa offering Pete and
Lanny’s parents a chance to decide the
boy’s fate.
Porter prefaces the book with
lines from Welsh poet Lynette Roberts,
opening with, “Peace, my stranger is a
tree ... it releases peace, peace of mind.”
It’s one code for
interpreting the
strange, mystical
events enveloping
Lanny and his family
in this potent ode to
the healing powers of
nature. l
LANNY, by Max Porter
(Faber & Faber, $29.99)

A FILM BY KLAUS HARO


IF YOU LIKED THE HUNDRED YEAR-OLD


MAN WHO CLIMBED OUT OF


THE WINDOW AND DISAPPEARED OR


WOMAN IN GOLD YOU WILL LOVE


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A charming old fashioned
heart-warmer

M: OFFENSIVE LANGUAGE.
Free download pdf