This
is likely to be the last work by Beverley Farmer, one of Australia’s great
prose stylists, and a pioneer of women’s writing, in her exploration of
feminine concerns, and her use of different literary forms – novel, short
story, poetry, essay, journal, myth and fairy tale.
This Water
is a collection of five tales, three of them novella length, each a fragmentary
love story with a nameless woman at the centre, and a mythic dimension (Greek
or Celtic, folklore or fable) rooted in the power of nature. Water and stone, ice
and fire, light and darkness play an important role in all the stories, as do
other motifs, closely related to women’s experience, blood, birth, possession
and release, marriage and singularity. One tale, set on the south coast of
Victoria, is animated by the legend of the Great Silkie, following Sylvia Plath
and Joan Baez; another finds its rebellious princess in Lake Annaghmakerrig in
Ireland; a third has Clytemnestra as its central figure, mourning the daughter sacrificed
by her husband Agamemnon so that he can go to war with Troy. The stories contain
and reflect and shadow one other: in each the women speak, act, think for
themselves, in opposing or escaping from situations ordained by authority.
Beverley Farmer is the
author of three collections of short stories, including Milk, which won the NSW Premier’s Award for Fiction,the writer’s notebook A Body of Water, and two novels The Seal Woman and The House in the Light, which was shortlisted for the Miles
Franklin Award. Her most recent book, The
Bone House, a collection of three long essays on the life of the body and
the life of the mind, was published by Giramondo in 2005.
‘Farmer uses language arrestingly, and is arrested by
it, and imparts this throughout to her reader.’ Sara Dowse
‘An
extraordinarily gifted and original talent’ The
Age
‘Farmer’s
prose, plangently beautiful and vivid with seashore and season, like poetry,
invites dipping into and savouring again and again.’ Katharine England
‘As
she explores the frailty of emotional experience, Farmer places her characters
in a luminous domain of elemental sensual experience…’ Cassandra Pybus