Sunday Star-Times

Horrifying twist turns novel into taut domestic thriller

- This review was originally published on Kete books (ketebooks. co.nz) and is reproduced here with kind permission.

Slow Down, You’re Here by Brannavan Gnanalinga­m (Lawrence & Gibson, $25) Reviewed by Dionne Christian

There is always satisfacti­on to be had from reading a book that starts off as one thing, but defies expectatio­ns to turn into something else altogether.

Brannavan Gnanalinga­m’s compelling seventh novel, Slow Down, You’re Here, is this kind of book.

Kavita is stuck in a dead-end marriage to Vishal; they’re the parents of two small children and Kavita is the main breadwinne­r. The couple’s hopes and dreams have turned into helplessne­ss and despair thanks to a toxic mix of systemic racism, global financial crisis and their own tentativen­ess.

While Vishal has sunk into lassitude, Kavita still has a spark and wants more from life. So, when an old flame unexpected­ly offers her a week away on Waiheke, she’s uncertain of whether to accept and, if she does, when – if – she’d come back.

Seeking a respite from her present, Kavita looks to the past and how it might create a new future but, as Gnanalinga­m writes, it’s nostalgia with an edge. A sharp one.

All this makes Slow Down, You’re Here sound like a kitchensin­k drama, where a woman searches for love and a newfound sense of identity, but it is not a fictionali­sed Eat, Pray, Love (for one thing, Kavita’s strict budget means there’s barely enough money for Waiheke let alone Italy, India and Indonesia).

Instead, a horrifying twist early on turns Slow Down, You’re Here into a taut domestic thriller. In just 200 pages, there are uncomforta­ble questions raised about the necessitie­s of survival, power imbalances and the ways our fate is controlled by forces outside our control.

Gnanalinga­m doesn’t layer on the adjectives. The novel’s clear, almost understate­d writing is one of its strengths; so is the juxtaposit­ion of two different settings which further ups the questionin­g, tension and palpable feeling of dread. He originally wrote an early draft of this as a film script and the story has a cinematic quality where you can vividly picture the settings and characters.

As a reader, you feel like a voyeur but you can’t look away when you’re increasing­ly drawn into reflecting on power imbalances – macro and micro – and the nature of relationsh­ips where the real desire lies in the idea of – rather than the reality of – a given person or relationsh­ip.

It’s smart, of and about Aotearoa here and now, and provocativ­e in its politics and personal concerns. Gnanalinga­m might cover a lot of ground but he does it surely with deft subtly and, at times, uneasy humour.

His last three novels have made either the Ockham NZ Book Awards’ long or short list and Sprigs won the 2021 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel. I’ll be disappoint­ed if Slow Down, You’re Here isn’t in the running for next year’s Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction at the Ockhams and wholly delighted if Gnanalinga­m goes home with the award.

 ?? ?? Brannavan Gnanalinga­m has been a regular on Ockham NZ Book Awards short and long lists – and Slow Down, You’re Here looks likely to continue that trend.
Brannavan Gnanalinga­m has been a regular on Ockham NZ Book Awards short and long lists – and Slow Down, You’re Here looks likely to continue that trend.
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