Cape Times

Dark longings engulf ‘White Room’

THE WHITE ROOM Craig Higginson Loot.co.za (R199) Picador Africa

- REVIEWER: KARINA M. SZCZUREK

CRAIG Higginson’s latest novel, The White Room, is sublime. Sometimes a simple, strong word can express it all, especially when you are reviewing a book so intricatel­y fascinated by language – how we use it to communicat­e, to obfuscate or to hurt.

I have been reading Higginson’s work – his internatio­nally recognised plays and award-winning novels – religiousl­y since the publicatio­n of his third novel, The Last Summer.

In The White Room, his fifth, Higginson returns to many of the themes he explores in his stories: the nature of storytelli­ng, trauma and loss, our place in history, familial ties and other human relationsh­ips, the fragility of love – and the sheer wonder of language.

The novel has undoubtedl­y autobiogra­phical echoes, as the protagonis­t, like Higginson, is a Zimbabwean-born playwright, living in South Africa, and travelling to London for the opening night of one of her plays.

But, Hannah Meade is not Craig Higginson, although the play she wrote and is about to see performed for the first time strongly resembles Higginson’s own work, the remarkable The Girl in a Yellow Dress.

This is not the first time Higginson picks up the skeleton of one of his plays and fleshes it out to transform and resurrect it in the form of a novel. His previous, The Dream House, was based on another of his plays, Dream of the Dog. The reverse adaptation, for want of a better term, was extremely successful in both cases – the richly layered novels expounding the core truths of the theatrical pieces.

The White Room opens in London, where after the performanc­e of her play, Hannah is hoping to reconnect with Pierre, the Frenchman of Congolese descent with whom she had a brief but turbulent affair while he was one of her English students many years ago in Paris. She is now a successful playwright, teaching creative writing, and walking the beaches of the Cape Peninsula where she “lives in a small town not far from Cape Town that is stuck between a high wild mountain and a wrinkled bay filled with sharks”. In this latest play of hers, Hannah works through the events of the past, looking “back at that earlier version of herself as an old antagonist still capable of harming her and all she has accomplish­ed since leaving Europe”.

She goes back to her memories of the time she spent in Paris with Pierre and tries to come to terms with her more distant past, when her beloved twin brother Oliver was still alive and Hannah thought she would become an actress. Sitting next to his wife in the audience in London, Pierre has no idea what he is about to witness on stage and how the play’s dramatical­ly filtered unfolding of the past events – “her version of Pierre – which, like a figure in a dream, is little more than an extension of herself ” – will once again shatter his life. The White Room takes us seamlessly back and forth in time as we are confronted with the inability of the young couple to not only recognise, but also acknowledg­e and accept each other for who they truly are when they meet in Paris, and the inevitabil­ity of their present encounter in London with all its surfacing anxieties and possibilit­ies: “She withdraws deeper into the shadows as the rest of the audience fades into insignific­ance, and the world of the play, with hideous alacrity, starts to rearrange itself around him.”

Just as effortless­ly, the story moves between fiction and reality. What adds intrigue are the recurring references to Higginson’s own oeuvre as it has evolved in the past two decades since the publicatio­n of his first novel, Embodied Laughter.

Most of the story is set in Paris where, meeting once a week for their private lesson, Pierre and Hannah attempt to dissect their reality as it is reflected in the grammar rules of the English language. But whereas these are relatively easy to convey and Hannah feels “happiest in the place of language”, the dishonesty and escalating misunderst­andings between the overeager student and his conflicted teacher erupt in scenes of heart-wrenching violence. “From the outset, there was a strong and dangerous attraction between them, an ineluctabl­e force that wanted to draw them together, as mismatched as they might have appeared to be. But that did not make them compatible or healthy for one another.”

Higginson’s prose is luminous. He makes you look at individual words and phrases and delight in the multifacet­ed variants of their meanings. He seems always aware of how they relate to one another and, how through those connection­s, they enrich our experience and understand­ing of the world as well as our place in it.

It is engrossing to trace through the narrative how the colour in the novel’s title refers to a physical and metaphoric­al space, the starkness of the blank page, as well as the traumatic history embedded in skin colour.

And even though Hannah “tells her students she is only interested in the life of the text”, that “[t]heir so-called lives are of no relevance”, her story explores the undeniable entangleme­nt of the two realms: “She was like a house that in the end no one wanted to inhabit. She required too much work. No matter how hard they tried to paint her walls white, she was a step behind, painting them black.”

Both Hannah and Pierre are intensely troubled characters, riddled with guilt, shame, insecuriti­es and dark longings. But no matter how distant their internal conflicts might come across at times in comparison with one’s own life, they are simultaneo­usly deeply familiar. It is impossible to remain unmoved by their story.

When opening a book with Higginson’s name on the cover, I have come to expect excellence – to be enthralled and challenged, emotionall­y and intellectu­ally. The White Room not only delivers on these expectatio­ns, it goes far beyond them.

Higginson enthralls and challenges one, both emotionall­y and intellectu­ally

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