SUMMER READING
Hannah won awards and
fans with her 2013 debut
novel, Burial Rites
($14.99, Picador
Australia), about the trial
of Anges Magnúsdóttir,
the last woman executed
in Iceland. Set in 1829, its
compelling prose brings
Iceland’s formidable
landscape to life. Her new
book, The Good People,
($32.99, Picador Australia)
is set in south-west
Ireland in 1825, and tells
the fascinating tale of
three women brought
together by strange and
troubling events.
Parade in Melbourne, happily sagging under the weight of
years and the lives of my friends who lived in it, filling its
rooms with romantic angst and the aroma of cheap-and-cheerful
dinners. There was the apartment, glossy with tiles, in
Ayutthaya, Thailand, where geckos decorated the walls and I
washed my sweat-stained teacher’s clothes in a tiny sink under
a wall pinned with sweet and funny letters from my students.
There was the sharehouse in Fitzroy where I assiduously hid
all signs of my prohibited, stowaway cat who loved me with
fierce adoration. The cottage in the Adelaide Hills with unsealed
floorboards, which knifed me with cold every morning before
I lit the wood stove, and a garden I resuscitated from neglect.
A farmhouse surrounded by snow. A swag and a night sky that
swayed with moonlight.
All of these places have been home to me, not for where they
were or the amount of time I spent there, but because they
became places of belonging through friendship, love or the
quiet companionship of landscape.
The German writer Christian Morgenstern once wrote
that “Home is not where you live, it is where they understand
you.” The older I get, the more I recognise the truth of this
aphorism. Home is, I have discovered, more often a state of
being than a physical place.
We are at home when we may be ourselves, no questions
asked. Home is anywhere, any connection, any time where we
may be known and accepted and, dare I say it, loved. This is
also how, once homed ourselves, we might offer this same gift
to others: through understanding, and through letting them
know that they, too, belong. #
DON’T MISS
For more great reading,
pick up next month’s H&G
when singer/song-writer and
debut novelist Holly Throsby
reflects on her childhood
home on Sydney
Harbour.