Weekend Herald - Canvas

What I’m reading ... BRYAN WALPERT

What’s the reading life without a book of poems or six on the go as well?

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Though a “literary” novel reader, I’ve been gravitatin­g to books with a speculativ­e element. I’m currently reading and enjoying Isobar Precinct, by Angelique Kasmara (Cuba Press). Set with wonderful detail in Auckland, it has a time travel element that is gradually being revealed. The book is character-driven, with a tattoo artist as narrator, Lestari Aris, who is tough and vulnerable and funny, and whose unresolved family issues are inextricab­le from the mysterious events she finds herself exploring and with which I find myself fully engaged.

I’ve just finished The Anomaly, by Herve Le Tellier, translated from French by Adriana Hunter. A plane from Paris lands in New York after going through a storm — but the same plane landed with the same people on it several months before. The book is a thought experiment with a compelling narrative drive and speculativ­e scientific basis. A social satire, handled with an enviably light touch, it has received internatio­nal acclaim and in France won the prestigiou­s Prix Goncourt.

Having enjoyed American author Richard Powers’ sprawling environmen­tal novel, The Overstory, I jumped into his much leaner Booker-shortliste­d Bewilderme­nt,

about the ameliorati­ng effects of an experiment­al scientific treatment on the astrobiolo­gist narrator’s son, a bullied child who thinks and feels more deeply than most (notably about environmen­tal issues). And I couldn’t put down Pakistani and British author Mohsin Hamid’s Exit West. It’s a few years old (also Booker shortliste­d), but then I’m always catching up and endlessly behind. Yet another character-driven thought experiment: a set of seemingly magic doors permit a couple from an unnamed country heading towards civil war to travel to Greece, England and the US — along with many others, leading to tensions between suddenly appearing refugees and nativists. It is a compelling novel about what it is to be displaced and how countries might engage with societal change.

And what’s the reading life without a book of poems or six on the go as well? I’m enjoying Australia-based New Zealander Jennifer Compton’s The Moment, Taken

(Recent Work Press), with its characteri­stic mix of sharp wit, deep feeling and striking images, e.g. the speaker “knitting up the scarf / of memory”, as well as Joanna Preston’s Tumble (Otago University Press), her starlings beautifull­y “anchoring night / with their feet”.

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 ?? ?? Entangleme­nt, by Bryan Walpert (Makaro Press, $35), is out now
Entangleme­nt, by Bryan Walpert (Makaro Press, $35), is out now

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