In the non-fiction section, there are some strong contenders. We’ve reviewed Ashleigh Young’s Can You Tolerate This? and Anthony Byrt’s This Model World. I’ve had Adam Dudding’s My Father’s Island in my sights for a while and I’m pleased it moved up the reading pile this week. This is very, very good: a fascinating insight into the highly regarded literary editor Robin Dudding from the perspective of his son Adam. Editor, journalist, founder of the important and respected literary magazine Islands (1972-1988), editor of Landfall (1966-1972) and Mate (1957-1966), Robin Dudding played a pivotal role in the development of New Zealand writing and the publishing landscape, giving many of our well-known authors exposure, opportunities and feedback. This is a memoir: personal, telling and searching, critical yet affectionate, candid and laced with wit, sadness, anger and admiration. It is a story of a brilliant mind and an important influence in New Zealand’s writing culture throughout the 60s & 70s and reveals Robin Dudding’s struggles both literally, the family lived in abject poverty throughout much of the 1970s, and psychologically, reflecting Dudding’s dilemmas and frustrations with the literary establishment and his obsession with his calling, often to the detriment of his family and marriage. And it is more than this, it is an insight into being a child in this bohemian family of six children (Adam is the youngest) through the 1970s and 80s, of living in run-down houses and makeshift fixes, of not having quite the right shoes, yet being at the elbow of his father, guided in the language of the editor, being immersed in a world of erudite ideas and fascinating people. Adam Dudding doesn’t romanticise anything in his account: it is brutally honest and he doesn’t shy away from telling it as it was. His father’s anger and self-destructive behaviours, especially throughout the 80s when a teenage Adam witnessed Robin’s callous behaviour toward Lois, his wife, and his general disappointment with life, had a profoundly negative effect on the family and on Robin's relationships with those closest to him. Adam Dudding has interviewed family, colleagues and writers, pulling together loose threads, interesting anecdotes and remarkable insights, mostly getting to the nub of matters but the 'truth' doesn't always out. As Dudding himself points out memory isn't always reliable (Adam recalling a childhood memory, realizes, while editing his book, that it's not quite as he remembered) and sometimes there is a tendency to be elusive, willfully forgetting, raising more questions than answers. The delights in this memoir come from its very personal nature, its clarity of thought, honesty in the headlights of the unpleasant, and Adam Dudding’s ability to write a gripping, fascinating tale about his father. {Reviewed by STELLA} |
Saturday 13 May 2017
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