Three Recent Review Books: Holmes, Tokarczuk & Whitaker

 

Where the Road Runs Out by Gaia Holmes (2018)

A gem of a poetry collection. Gaia Holmes is a creative writing tutor in Halifax, Yorkshire. This is her third volume of poetry. A major thread of the book is caring for her father at home and in the hospital as he was dying on the Orkney Islands – a time of both wonder and horror. It felt like she could never get anything right and kept angering him, as she recounts in “Feckless.” Even after his death, she continued to see him. I especially loved the food metaphors in “Kummerspeck” (a German term for emotional overeating; literally, “grief bacon”), where sweets, meat and salt cannot sate the cravings of ravenous grief.

Other themes include pre-smartphone life (“Before All This” – not everything needed to be documented, you could live where you were and not rely on others’ constant approval), the lengths women will go to impress men (“The Audition”), being the only childless person in a room (“Ballast”) and a marriage falling apart (“Your Orange Raincoat”). Also notable are a multi-part tribute to the Chilean miners trapped in 2010 and an imagined outbreak of violence between runners and ramblers. Holmes channels Anne Sexton in “Angel of the Checkout,” with its wonderful repeated line “do you know the price of love?”, and Mary Oliver in the first stanza of “Wild Pigeons.”

There are no rhymes, just alliteration and plays on words, with a lot of seaside imagery. I would highly recommend this to poetry lovers and newbies alike.

A favorite passage:

I have no manual

for dying

so I do what I think

you’re supposed to do

in this situation.

I light the stub

of last night’s candle,

utter something holy

and stand

at your bedside

with the unfamiliar taste

of the Lord’s Prayer

clinging to my lips.

(from “The Lord’s Prayer”)

My rating:


My thanks to Comma Press for the free copy for review.

 

Drive Your Plow over the Bones of the Dead by Olga Tokarczuk (2009; English translation, 2018)

[Translated from the Polish by Antonia Lloyd-Jones]

What a bizarre novel! Janina Dusezjko is a delightfully twisted Miss Marple type who lives in a remote forest cabin in Poland, near the Czech border. She’s determined to learn the truth of what happened to her two beloved dogs, whom she calls her Little Girls. When four different men who were involved in local hunting – her unpleasant neighbor, a deer poacher whom she nicknamed Big Foot; a police commandant; a fox farm owner; and the president of the mushroom pickers’ association – are all found murdered, her theorizing runs wild. She believes the animals are taking revenge, and intends to use her astrology skills to glean more information about these untimely deaths. The police, meanwhile, dismiss her as a hysterical old crone.

The title comes from William Blake, whose writing is an undercurrent to the book: Dizzy, Janina’s former English pupil, is reading and translating Blake, and I reckon Janina’s nutty philosophy and capitalization of random words, especially abstractions, may be an homage to Blake. I probably missed some of the more intricate allusions, and my attention wandered for a while during the middle of the book, but this was an offbeat and mostly enjoyable read. I struggled with Flights, but I’m glad I tried Tokarczuk again.

A representative passage:

“We have this body of ours, a troublesome piece of luggage, we don’t really know anything about it and we need all sorts of Tools to find out about its most natural processes.”

My rating:


My thanks to Fitzcarraldo Editions for the free copy for review.

 

Chicken Unga Fever: Stories from the Medical Frontline by Dr. Phil Whitaker (2018)

This is a selection of Whitaker’s “Health Matters” columns from the New Statesman magazine. In his time as a GP he’s seen his fair share of common and unusual illnesses, and has so honed his diagnosing skills that he can start to figure out what’s wrong based on how someone stands up and walks towards his office from the waiting room. That’s why he’s a “meeter” (calling names in person and escorting patients down the hallway) rather than a “buzzer” (waiting for them to come to him, having being called via a digital screen).

In digestible essays of 2.5 pages each, Whitaker discusses mental health sectioning, home visiting, the rise of technology and antibiotic resistance, the culture of complaint, zealous overscreening and overtreatment (he’d have an ally there in Barbara Ehrenreich: see her Natural Causes) and the tricky issue of getting consent from teenagers. He also recreates individual cases that have left an impression on him. When it comes to diagnoses, he recognizes that sometimes it’s a matter of luck – like when he landed on Cushing’s disease based on a rare combination of common symptoms – and that sometimes you have to admit you don’t know and turn to the Internet. That’s where the title comes from – an out-of-hours caller’s approximation of suspected chikungunya fever.

This is an enjoyable book for medically minded laymen to read a few pieces at a time, though I suspect its take on various issues could soon be outdated.

My rating:


My thanks to Salt Publishing for the free copy for review.

14 responses

  1. TheTokarczuk was very strange but I enjoyed it. I gather Flights is very different.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Flights is a long book in fragments, with lots of history and philosophy dotted through and not much of a proper narrative. It was a real struggle for me.

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      1. I’m far from wedded to a linear narrative but that sounds a step too far for me.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. I’ll definitely give Gaia Holmes a go.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. They’re very accessible poems.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. I just bought Fights and Drive your Plow over the bones of the dead, and so I am certainly looking forward to that one. Your description of the novel ensuring that I will pick it up soon.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’ll be interested to see what you think!

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      1. I got a chuckle out of the overlap between your “recent acquisitions” posts!

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  4. I like the sound of “Drive your plow over the Bones of the Dead”. I like the title, too. And the poetry sounds good, even for someone like me!
    I always enjoy your reviews of the medical books – they’re always so tempting. Does he elaborate at all about how he can tell what’s wrong by the way his patients walk?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I agree, it was worth picking up Drive Your Plow just for the title!

      It’s things like: can they walk unassisted, are they clutching a particular body part in pain, do they seem breathless or pale…

      Liked by 1 person

  5. I’m not sure if either the first or the last book is one that would be a good match for me, but I enjoyed the excerpt from the poem and the links you’ve made with other recent medical reading as well. I am interested in Olga Tokarczuk, this book and in general, but I don’t feel like I’m in the right kind of concentrate-y mood just now. Not that I’m not concentrating at all, there are a few demanding reads in my stacks, but I’m just rationing. *grins*

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Drive Your Plow is not hugely demanding; certainly not in comparison to Flights, which would require much more of a commitment.

      Liked by 1 person

  6. I’m always interested in nonfiction about medicine, so Chicken Unga Fever sounds like my kind of book. I’m more surprised that I’m sold on Where the Road Runs Out. I read essentially no poetry, but I like the poem you shared from this collection and the topics it addresses seem fascinating.

    Liked by 1 person

  7. […] like Robert Seethaler’s A Whole Life and becomes increasingly reminiscent of Olga Tokarczuk’s Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead with its remote setting, hunting theme, and focus on an older character of dubious mental […]

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