Inside the Australian and New Zealand book industry

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Mr Wigg (Inga Simpson, Hachette)

The book that comes to mind on having finished Inga Simpson’s Mr Wigg is Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird. They share nothing much in common; Mr Wigg is set in country Australia in 1970, is about a man at the end of his long life, and the most contentious issue touched on is the sacking of Bill Lawry as captain of the Australian cricket team. But even so, that warm feeling that comes from having read something that has strengthened or even reawakened a sense of what is right and good about the world overwhelmed me on closing the book. And also, I suspect, though it isn’t actually true of Mr Wigg, both stories are from the point of view of the child. I know nothing of Inga Simpson, and I may easily have been tricked by her wonderful art, but I think this book is in some way an account of someone, and somewhere, she loved as a young person. Whatever its genesis, Mr Wigg is beautiful. A strange word to use, I know, but it is what it is.

John Purcell is head of marketing and chief buyer at booktopia.com.au

 

Category: Reviews