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Bruised beauty

by
November 2009, no. 316

Smoke in The Room by Emily Maguire

Picador, $29.99 pb, 282 pp

Bruised beauty

by
November 2009, no. 316

It takes nerve to create three self-absorbed characters, set them in dingy inner-urban Sydney over one summer, give them booze, cigarettes and tattoos, and locate the drama in a share house without resorting to a He Died with a Falafel in His Hand fiasco of bad manners. But with this scenario Emily Maguire, in her surreptitiously brilliant third novel, has instead created a riveting emotional composition which plays out with the basso of a tragic opera, the discipline of a stage play and the authenticity of real life. The book sucks us into its melodramas and subtleties; we enter both a plausible and dynamic depiction of contemporary dysfunction, and a carefully crafted parable on the gifts and hazards of caring for one another.

In her work on contemporary feminism, Princesses and Pornstars: Sex, Power, Identity (2008), Maguire made a call for women to respect each other’s choices. In Smoke in the Room, she gives us a female character who is difficult to like, at least in the beginning. Katie is the landlady’s granddaughter. When we meet her, she is a skittish, immature creature of impulse – baffling impulse – and aimless self-absorption. She drinks too much, collects tabloid magazines and mulishly resists her grandmother’s advice to get a job. Indeed, she seems an unlikeable and shallow young adult with not much in her head except boredom and the urge to provoke.

Smoke in The Room

Smoke in The Room

by Emily Maguire

Picador, $29.99 pb, 282 pp

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