Not
everything worth reading is hot off the press. In this section, we recommend "something old" that is still well worth
reading. "Something Old" can mean anything from a venerable and antique
classic to a good book first published four or more years ago.
“THE
LUMINARIES” by Eleanor Catton (first
published 2013)
Let me begin with the expression of a mild
grievance. Early in 2013, I was asked if I would review, for Landfall
magazine, a novel I had never heard of
called The Luminaries. At that time, few other people knew about it, either. Landfall
appears twice a year, and like other periodicals which appear in such
circumstances, it has a very long lead-time for its contributors. I set about
diligently reading this very long novel, and was very impressed with it. I
wrote a review which said so. But between my submitting the review and the date
the review was published, months went by. And in those months, the novel was
first given dismissive reviews by two elderly New Zealand literary figures
writing in London newspapers; then it gained momentum and won international
praise, whereupon it also received positive reviews in New Zealand;
and finally it won the Booker Prize and received hosannahs. And only then did
my review appear. So I was slightly miffed that my review might have been taken
as jumping on a bandwagon by praising a book that was already loaded with
honours. And I feel like asserting that I got there before the bandwagon was in
motion. Oh well. Heaving a sigh, I here present you with my review of The
Luminaries, unaltered from its appearance in Landfall #226, Spring
2013.
In a famous passage in his autobiography (which I quote
per Walter Allen’s venerable The English
Novel), Anthony Trollope discussed the working methods of the mystery
writer Wilkie Collins. He wrote:
“Wilkie Collins seems so to construct his [novels] that he not only,
before writing, plans everything on paper, down to the minutest detail, from
the beginning to the end; but then plots it all back again, to see that there
is no piece of necessary dove-tailing that does not dove-tail with absolute
accuracy. The construction is most minute and most wonderful. But I can never
lose the taste of the construction. The author seems always to be warning me to
remember that something happened at exactly half-past two o’clock on Tuesday
morning; or that a woman disappeared from the road just fifteen yards beyond
the fourth milestone. One is constrained by mysteries and hemmed in by
difficulties, knowing, however, that the mysteries will be made clear, and the
difficulties overcome by the end of the third volume.”
With
great accuracy, and especially in the phrases “the taste of the construction” and “constrained by mysteries”, Trollope catches the effect of mystery
novels upon many readers. Those long Victorian detective novels, whether by
Wilkie Collins or by the undervalued Sheridan Le Fanu, place a special strain
upon readers. In order to make sense of them, you have to hold in your head
much factual information and remember specific connections between characters
in ways that are not necessary when reading other sorts of novel.
I
mention this in reviewing Eleanor Catton’s The
Luminaries for two obvious reasons. First, it is essentially a story of
mystery and its construction is indeed “most wonderful”, linking a large cast
of major characters and many minor ones. Second, it is set in the Victorian era
(the 1860s) and, at over 830 pages of text, is at least as long as anything the
Victorians penned. I admit that in reading it, I often had to check back to
remind myself who was married to whom, or who was a business partner or enemy
of whom. The chart of twenty characters printed at the beginning was both
necessary and a great help.
In
the way it establishes itself, The
Luminaries has the hallmarks of a classic mystery. Young Walter Moody
arrives in Hokitika at the beginning of 1866 hoping to prospect for gold; but he
first puts up in a hotel, where he finds himself in the midst of a conclave of
men discussing a mystery that seems to involve them all. From most of them in
turn, Moody hears a version of events. Collectively they give many different
and overlapping perspectives, Rashomon-like.
The mystery involves the disappearance of young Emery Staines and the death in
his shack of the hermit Crosbie Wells. At stake is a fortune in gold belonging
to Wells, which is one reason why so many people are interested. Crosbie Wells
was somehow connected to the ship-owner and criminal Francis Carver and his
wife the fortune-teller and whoremonger Lydia. Crosbie was discovered dead by
the rising politician Alistair Lauderback, and the situation involves the
prostitute Anna Wetherell, the pushy law officer George Shepard and the Chinese
goldsmith Quee Long.
Who
has a right to the fortune in gold, where exactly did it come from, how has
most of it been secreted, and why are all these men interested?
So,
through 360 pages, Walter Moody hears the views of the shipping agent Thomas
Balfour and the pharmacist Joseph Pritchard and the greenstone hunter Te Rau
Tauwhare, and the Methodist minister Cowell Devlin and the local tycoon and
brothel-keeper Dick Mannering and others. All this testimony – all 360 pages of
it – is given on the same day in January 1866. I offer no “spoilers”. If the
chief appeal of a mystery story is the unravelling of a mystery, then it is not
the business of reviewers to broadcast the solution (or – in the case of this
polyphonous novel – the solutions). Be it noted, however, that significant
details include the backstories of families and unsuspected blood
relationships; blackmail; the use of opium; confidence tricks to increase the
sale value of diggings by “salting” them with nuggets; legal chicanery; illegal
violence; and the smuggling of vital items sewn into the lining of dresses.
By
the time Walter Moody has heard all this testimony, and as we approach page
360, we are considerately given a recapitulation of all the evidence lest we
have lost our bearings. And it is after this point that we rapidly realize the
novel does not quite inhabit the territory we thought it did. For if The Luminaries were no more than a
pastiche of a Victorian mystery novel – albeit with a New Zealand setting –
then Mr Moody would draw all the threads together and explain neatly how
everything fitted into place, the way Mr Cuff or Inspector Bucket or Sherlock
Holmes do when all the witnesses have spoken and all the motives of characters
have been ticked off. A rational order would have been restored. Indeed, such
rationality is signalled when we are told (p.359) “Moody had no religion – and therefore did not perceive truth in
mystery, in the inexplicable and the unexplained, in the mists that clouded
one’s scientific perception as the material cloud now obscured the Hokitika sky”.
But
neat rational deduction is not what happens in The Luminaries. Time resumes in the remaining 472 pages of the
novel, new events are piled on old, and despite two long courtroom scenes, the
motives of characters become more, rather than less, opaque. Some mysteries are
resolved. They have to be if the novel is not to become a gigantic tease. Yet
what begins as a rational explanation of diverse, but connected, events, ends
as fragments of experience. It culminates in a long series of flashbacks to
events from the year prior to the novel’s opening, which re-cast characters in
ways quite at odds with our earlier impressions of them. This a-chronological
order is foreshadowed in an early sequence (pp.105-06) where Te Rau Tauwhare
translates the name Hokitika as meaning “Around.
And then back again, beginning.” This is the method of the novel itself.
Some
nineteenth century novelistic conventions are observed throughout The Luminaries. These include those
brief synopses of the action that serve as headings to each chapter (“In which Gascoigne repeats his theories, and
Moody speaks of death” etc.). But by the end of the novel these conventions
are being parodied and subverted. The chapter headings become longer and longer
and the chapters themselves shorter and shorter, to the point where the
synopses are telling the story while the ensuing “chapters” are giving us mere
impressionistic moments of time.
In
this way, and without cheating those who expect answers, The Luminaries moves from being a pastiche of Victorian detective
novels to being a deconstruction and critique of the whole notion of rational
detection.
Would
it be too much to call it an anti-mystery novel?
If
The Luminaries were no more than
this, it would be a remarkable literary achievement. But it is considerably
more. By Catton’s choice of leading characters, by her exposure of their
suspect motives, and by the mixing of ethnicities, the novel also gives a
detailed picture of a raw, volatile, exploitative colonial society; a
“frontier” society still based on the myth of wide-open opportunity and the
realities of extractive industries and fierce competition for capital. The time
is specifically the moment when the Otago goldfields are running out, the West
Coast looks the likelier prospect, and “West Canterbury” is about to become
(briefly) the province of Westland. The connection between an excess of males
and thriving prostitution is obvious, as is the connection between prostitution
and the wide use of opiates. Along with the British, Maori and Chinese
characters, there is also a German Jew (the newspaper editor Benjamin
Lowenthal), a Frenchman (the law clerk Aubert Gascoigne) and one New
Zealand-born Pakeha (the banker Charlie Frost) who, paradoxically, is more ill
at ease in this frontier world than the assorted immigrants are. The diverse
reactions of all to this new country are what make The Luminaries a convincing social mosaic.
It
is historically right that much of the novel’s backstory involves dirty
criminal doings in old Sydney, the cross-Tasman connection being a huge factor
in all New Zealand gold rushes. It is also historically right that there is a
tension between the lawlessness of the frontier society, and the propriety of
language that is often used to describe it. (This was also a major theme in
Charlotte Randall’s West Coast-set Hokitika
Town). A real achievement is Catton’s refusal to repeat current
stereotypical conceptions of Victorian-ness. For example, a number of men look
longingly at the whore Anna Wetherell, seeing their own feelings as chaste and
their motives as the pure ones of wishing to “save” her. This type of situation
has often been the cue for satirical dramatizations of Victorian “hypocrisy”.
Eleanor Catton chooses the harder course of showing the depth of the men’s
feelings and the profound psychological and sexual effects of a society in
which women are a small minority.
Judging
by her prose style, Catton has apparently immersed herself in the writing of
the era in which the novel is set. As an incorrigible pedant, I am always on
the lookout for anachronisms in dialogue supposedly spoken by characters in a
past age. The Luminaries has
characters saying “heist” meaning robbery
(p.37, p.253 and p.736); “class act”
(p.64 and p.243); “taking me for a ride”
in its threatening gangster-esque sense (p.103); the Americanism “john” for a prostitute’s client (p.228);
the statement that “a lawyer would be
able to join the dots” (p.539); a reference to “shoot-outs” (p.598); and the sneer that “you are becoming paranoiac” (p.740). I may be wrong, but I do not
believe that any of these would have been common usage in the mid-nineteenth
century. Indeed, I believe some of them were not coined until much later. That
I have been able to compile only such a short list from 830 pages, however, is
an indication that Eleanor Catton is usually pitch-perfect in her “Victorian”
prose. This is evident in those neat paragraphs of physical and psychological
characterization with which each person in the novel is introduced. It is also
evident in her precise descriptions of place. Yet there is no sense of mugging
up. If she presents us with some physical processes – how newspapers were then
set up; the difficulties ships had crossing the bar at Hokitika’s river mouth;
how young women were inveigled into prostitution – it is because they are
integral to her story and not decoration for the sake of period atmosphere.
Thus
far in this review, I have deliberately refrained from mentioning one element
in The Luminaries that might be of
central interest to a minority of readers and is evidently important to the
author. This (from the title on) is its astrological symbolism and content. The
separate parts of the novel are all introduced with astrological charts showing
the planetary influences upon characters at each given date of the action.
Chapter titles declare “Saturn in Libra”, “First Point of Aries” and so forth.
I am tempted to dismiss this as mystification that adds little to the novel’s
meaning, and I am not mollified by the specific exegesis of astrology that is
given at pp.531-32.
But
perhaps I should trust the author more, for there is one passage in the novel
in which the stars become a potent symbol of the settler condition. Walter
Moody turns his eyes to the skies at p.343 and finds “Orion - upended, his quiver
beneath him, his sword hanging upward from his belt; Canis Major – hanging like
a dead dog from a butcher’s hook. There was something very sad about it, Moody
thought. It was as if the ancient patterns had no meaning here.” At this
point, New Zealand is still what is alien to Europeans. Its otherness is read
in the stars. Patterns of meaning and morality have to be re-negotiated.
This
sense of a new, unfamiliar world is something The Luminaries shares with the best recent New Zealand historical
novels, Randall’s Hokitika Town,
Hamish Clayton’s Wulf and Paula
Morris’s Rangatira. But its
imaginative grasp is greater.
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