We feature each fortnight Nicholas Reid's reviews and comments on new and recent books.
“AT THE GRAND GLACIER HOTEL” by Laurence Fearnley (Penguin, $NZ36.99)
I am a little behind the band, but I have only now got around to reading Laurence Fearnley’s novel At the Grand Glacier Hotel. It was first published in 2024 and it was a finalist for the Ockham NZ Books Awards in 2025. I have read nearly all of Laurence Fearnley’s novels. I recall reviewing in newspapers her earlier novels Mother’s Day and Edwin and Matilda. And in this blog you can find my reviews of her The Hut Builder, Reach, The Quiet Spectacular [ the novel that I thought was too preachy], To the Mountains - an anthology , and Winter Time which I think is one of her most readable novels. [To see all these reviews, look at Laurence Fearnley on the list at the right.]. When I reviewed Winter Time, I said “…her greatest skill… is setting her story in a harsh South Island winter, which she depicts with careful and close observation. Fearnley has much expertise when it comes to mountains and the outdoors (remember she co-edited an anthology about New Zealand mountains, and helped write a mountaineering friend’s autobiography). It shows here as she charts the seasons changing, the snow, the semi-thaw, the way plants behave in the cold and the inconveniences for walkers and other travellers. The chilliest images in Winter Time are of [a man] alone in the family home, with the cold biting at him. A perfect image for a man who is lonely, worried in his heart...”
Fearnley’s skill is in At the Grand Glacier Hotel as well, where she can easily tell us about the flora and fauna of the South Island and give us a sweeping view of the West Coast as well as looking into the matter of birds and other creatures that are unique to the South Island. It is also clear [and apparently related to her own life] that she knows about what it is to become ill and having to put up with being in hospital… as well as the matter of growing older.
A brief synopsis goes like this. The novel is written in the first person by “Libby” Holt. She and her husband Curtis have been married for 25 years. They live in Dunedin. Libby is about 50. They have one daughter Hannah who appears in the novel only occasionally. Libby and Curtis can’t go overseas. Out of nostalgia, they decide to go the Grand Glacier Hotel, which is on the West Coast and where they had holidayed when they were younger. But, by a mistake, Curtis has to leave her as he dashes away and then has to go back his work. At one point in the novel, Libby says “What he said about not missing each other was true but it didn’t reflect poorly in our relationship. Before I got sick, we were both happily independent; it defined our marriage. One of us would often be away, Travelling for work, and we enjoyed busy lives and careers. Time together was a welcome addition, but not something we clung to”. [Chapter Eleven] So Libby is on her own in the very old Grand Glacier Hotel. The main point here is that Libby has gone through the trauma of having cancer and also having a tumour on her leg. Although she is doing reasonably well, she is often hurt when she walks or when she has to get out of the bath. Very often, she remembers with horror all the times when she had to be in a hospital or being dealt with by doctors. Chapter Twenty-Seven Late in the novel she says: “ For months I’d endured blood tests, cannulas for CT and MRI scans, transfusions and IV’s, not the mention general anaesthetics. I’d become almost immune to needles and been merely curious about the track marks and the bruises that extended from my shoulder to my thumb. But every now and then, during my worst moments, the prodding and strain had been too much and my teeth would begin to chatter. I could feel the same thing beginning to happen now…” [ Chapter Twenty-Seven]
At first in Grand Glacier Hotel, she feels all alone, and not capable of walking alone on the paths; but she does get to know some of the people, some of whom seem to be regulat visitors – a young woman who seems to be writing pop novels; a cult of people who sometimes speak in Esperanto; and an older man called Mc.Kendrick who has some sort of relationship with a younger man called man James. She also goes through a severe storm where there is a power-cut. But despite her pain, she is still determined to walk the wet and sometimes steep paths. She says “ I could still feel the bruising burn across my breasts and all the way down my shins. The heaviness that never let up had a hold on my leg, weighing it down like a toddler clinging to my calf. Every step required a concentrated lift up, followed by a swing forward. I was so completely worn down, I wanted to go back to my room but I needed to prove to myself that I could do it. Mind over matter: I wasn’t a complete failure. So here I was, making the most of the outdoors again.” [Chapter Eighteen]
Clearly, Laurence Fearnley wants us to see Libby as both a brave and thoughtful person, not one to whine, but also not presented as a hero. She is an intelligent common-sense person who simply wants to get on with things and not waste time. It is an appealing image, carefully presented by the author. Libby, it turns out, is greatly helped by the younger man James, who knows the tracks, knows many things about birds, flora and fauna including bats in caves, and opens her eyes to the nature of the Wild West Coast. Now if this were a Hollywood film, Libby would fall in love with young James etc. etc. Not a bit of it. James helps Libby and Libby has a lot to think about. Two mature people, and it turns out that James has also gone through some physical pain in his life. Libby also learns what some the Coasters mores are which she didn’t know.
There is only one thing in this novel that irks me. There is in the novel a sort of scavenger hunt in which James sometimes works out where thing are hiding, and enlightening Libby about these things. This seems very artificial. A small quibble though. I think this is one of Laurence Fearnley’s best.
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Footnote: In this novel there is comment made on the way the glaciers on the West Coast have diminished over the years. This I know well. About 40 years ago my wife and I toured around the South Island and we stopped to look at both the Fox and the Franz Josef Glaciers. They had both retreated into the mountains far from the sea, but there was still much glacier to see. Last year we took a similar journey and saw the same two glaciers. There had retreated even further into the barren mountains so that there was very little to see at all.






