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We feature each week Nicholas Reid's reviews and comments on new and recent books.
We feature each week Nicholas Reid's reviews and comments on new and recent books.
“MYSTERIOUS
MYSTERIES OF THE ARO VALLEY” by Danyl McLauchlan (Victoria University Press,
$NZ30)
Reviewing Danyl
McLauchlin’s Unspeakable Secrets of theAro Valley nearly three years ago, I did note its witty and playful
tampering with the Gothic horror genre, and its sharp evocation of a dusty and
fusty corner of Wellington; but I also registered my view that its
pratfall-laden fun-and-games did go on a bit. For all my misgivings, I was
chuffed to receive a nice note from the author saying that he enjoyed the
review and thought I’d picked up on points of the novel other reviewers had
missed.
Now with the
sequel, Mysterious Mysteries of the Aro
Valley to review, I almost feel that I’m going to repeat the same praise
and the same misgivings. From the deliberately inept title onwards, you know
that this one is as much founded on gigantic leg-pull as the first novel was. It’s
great fun; it shows great skill in the telling; when it wants to do moments of
Gothic fantasy “seriously” it does them as capably as the experts do…. and at
370 pages it does go on a bit. One more chase through a threatening tunnel, one
more dorkish mishap, and my patience would have snapped.
For the record,
the set-up has Danyl McLauchlin (yes, the hero has the same name as the author)
released from psychiatric care, returning to Wellington’s faded bohemian
enclave the Aro Valley to find his missing girlfriend Verity, and in short
order discovering a dark and daunting secret that threatens the entire
universe, no less. Danyl is an unreliable narrator, a loser, a bit of a twit,
paranoid – in other words, more than a little like the heroes of conspiracy
novels that take themselves seriously. Little does Danyl know that,
independently, his old mate Steve (who coincidentally has the same name as one
of the author’s best mates) is delving into the same dark and daunting secrets
as Danyl is, but coming from an entirely different direction. Inevitably their
paths will cross – and their parallel delvings give the author the chance to
show his narrative skill by sometimes interlocking the same events as seen from
different viewpoints.
So.
In we plunge to
a world in which apparently harmless archivists are really agents of demonic
power, and ancient second-hand bookshops are portals to a hellish underworld,
and an uncompleted real estate project is the refuge for malign destructive
forces, and running under the Aro Valley are huge tunnels which either
could lead to universal enlightenment or could enable huge forces to break through
and destroy our cosmos as we know it. A Spiral-shaped symbol warns our intrepid
(and idiotic) hero of the extent to which the other world has impinged upon the
Aro Valley. Well you always do get dark portents and “codes” understood only by
initiates in Gothic horror, don’t you? Said idiotic hero is often chased by a
giant capable of tearing him limb from limb. There is a drug called DoorWay,
which zonks out unsuspecting citizens who wander into the nether world,
allowing them to enter into the Real City (which may not be real) but also
making them manipulable by malign cosmic forces. A group called the
Cartographers are apparently at war with something (or someone) called the Gorgon,
which may or may not have supernatural powers. Mind you, the Gorgon at one
point gets voted onto the Te Aro community council.
And this reminds
you that it is all going on under the streets of a Wellington suburb. As an
early declaration warns us: “Te Aro,
where nothing was as it seemed. Beneath the city’s quirky superficial charm
lurked depths of madness.” (p.29)
I admit I
enjoyed most the parts where the author makes satire out of the Wellington
suburb and its bohemian pretensions, in such phrases as:
“Rush hour. Even in the depths of winter
there would have been people getting up and going out to teach yoga classes, or
to beg change from commuters in the Capital.” (p.56)
Or:
“He made his way over to the shelves on his
hands and knees and examined the record player. They were a dead technology
everywhere else in the world, but the subculture of Te Aro had formed a deep
emotional attachment to these devices and they were standard issue in most
homes.” (p.85)
Or (referencing
student radicals and alternative lifestylers):
“Anarchist cells were broken up and
revolutionary demagogues returned to their anxious parents. Much-loved tenement
buildings were deemed unfit for human habitation and condemned; their
inhabitants were dragged blinking and screaming from their lightless interiors
by child welfare agencies. It was a disaster for the culture and economy of the
valley.” (p.145)
Or the point
where the fictitious Danyl declares:
“People see the residents of Te Aro as
pot-addled, new-age dreamers. But that’s just a lazy stereotype. Only about
sixty or seventy percent of the population falls into that category.”
(p.286)
When a community
archive is run by people who never, ever, ever want anybody to access its
contents, you understand that this is only a smidgeon away from the reality of
many community services, the obstruction of petty bureaucrats and so forth. So Mysterious Mysteries of the Aro Valley
has its quota of deadpan satire.
There’s another
interesting level to it.
Danyl, just out
of psychiatric care, not sure whether he should go back on his medication of
not, is really like the Sleepwalker Cesare in The Cabinet of Dr Caligari and this is “a tale told by an idiot,
full of sound and fury”. For at least the first half of Mysterious Mysteries of the Aro Valley, it would be reasonable to
read it as the distorted hallucinations of a troubled (or post-medicated) mind
misinterpreting harmless reality. Only later (once the narrative of Steve gets
going) does this fruitful ambiguity dissipate.
Once past the
unreliable narrator aspect of it, the accommodating gormlessness of Danyl is
engaging. Pick him out in this scene where he is in danger of being beaten to
death by his nemesis the giant, and note his attitude:
“Danyl lay on the concrete and the giant lay
on Danyl, a vast warm bulk pressing down on him. It felt quite nice, actually:
being pinned to the ground, face down, completely powerless. Not in a sexual
way. It was more that while he was trapped beneath the giant Danyl didn’t have
to make any decisions about what to do or say. He felt safe.” (p.117)
As for the
chase-and-slapstick element of it (a very large part of the novel consists of
either Danyl or Steve pursuing or being pursued by enemies), it certainly has
its high points. As a piece of clever imbecility, I relished the sequence when
the idiots make their escape from a bathroom using a bathtub for protection,
and then having to hide beneath the bathtub when they attract the unwelcome
attentions of a savage dog. This has the same sort of surreal inevitability as
the ancient movie sequence where Laurel and Hardy try to carry a piano over a
rope bridge and meet a gorilla halfway.
Ah yes, but
there is quite a lot of it, and it will be entirely depending on your own taste
whether you can take a great deal of this.