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Barracuda (Christos Tsiolkas, A&U)

After the success of 2008’s The Slap, Christos Tsiolkas could be excused for feeling he had nothing more to prove. Perhaps though it was that completely unexpected good fortune that planted one of the seeds for Barracuda, surely his most personal and heartfelt book to date, and I think his most accomplished.

What is the price of striving for career success? Are personal relationships a necessary casualty? And why is it that if one appears to fail, it seems that no-one wants to know you anymore, and even to yourself you can become a nothing?

Danny Kelly is a talented swimmer, but from the wrong side of the tracks—at least from the perspective of the snooty boys’ private school in Melbourne’s east to which he wins a sporting scholarship. Working-class, and a wog to boot, he cops his fair share of harassment, but soon his ability in the pool becomes his secret weapon against his abusers. Until, that is, his prowess starts to go awry (mentally as much as physically) and Danny is forced to find his base—and his future—from within, not without.

To start to summarise Barracuda though is to diminish this big, sprawling, ever-so-affecting book. And the structure is a feat in itself: Tsiolkas runs a dual narrative throughout, alternating between Danny’s schooldays, which are dominated in equal parts by swimming and loathing; and his life (as Dan) ten years on, which includes time spent with his partner Clyde in Scotland, the homeland, as it happens, of his migrant father Neal. And always the flashbacks to those formative poolside years …

This is vintage Tsiolkas. He writes uncompromisingly about the way we live now, unafraid to address the many unspoken issues that taint our society—be they class division, racism, profligate government spending, craven Indigenous and refugee politics, or simply the pervasive ‘comfortableness’ and insularity of the Australian body politic. And for all the cultural critique there is no shortage of comic barbs: I guffawed audibly when Danny’s school is given the nickname ‘Cunts College’ near the beginning of the novel, and enjoyed Danny’s rumination on the finer points of his classmates spending their summer holidays in Portsea and Sorrento as opposed to Rye and Rosebud.

Perhaps what is new here though is the expanded emotional register: the emphasis on the importance of home, of fraternity, of belonging, of a language beyond words to forge our bonds. And learning how to communicate, particularly with one’s parents, as an essential rite of passage in our lives: Barracuda is such a lyrical, loving tribute to those that can help you not only fly through the water, but can make you fly through life as well.

Finally an aspect that I can’t help but read autobiographically: Dan declares his indebtedness to the discovery of literature in his 20s (‘Just as he had in water, he could lose himself in reading: mind and body became one’). Several wonderful little paeans to writers such as Faulkner, our own David Malouf, Chekhov and Graham Greene follow. When Dan is questioned by a librarian as to why he isn’t interested in ‘more modern stuff’ he responds that ‘the contemporary writers annoyed him, he found their worlds insular, their style too self-conscious and ironic. Theirs was not a literature that belonged to him.’

To be sure none of those descriptors apply to our contemporary Tsiolkas—quite the opposite in fact. The German romantic poet Novalis once wrote: ‘The world must be romanticised. In this way we find its original meaning again.’ The beautiful ugliness that is Australia has found its chronicler in Tsiolkas, and we know ourselves better and are the richer for it. Our world has been Tsiolkasised. On the strength of Barracuda, there is not a more important writer working in Australia today.

Martin Shaw is the books division manager at Readings

 

Category: Reviews