Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

A coming-of-age story high-stakes

- By Trent Dalton R372 ELLEN MORTON

SET in Australia, is a sprawling novel about a thoughtful boy’s premature journey into manhood. At age 12, Eli Bell has grasped the last idyllic strands of innocence. He is catapulted reluctantl­y out of his youth after he discovers the depth of his mom and step-dad’s involvemen­t with local drug trafficker­s.

The only option for Eli and his brother, August, is to move in with their estranged father, an alcoholic whose mind “operates with as much order and predictabi­lity as the insides of our lounge room vinyl beanbag”.

As a narrator, Eli is a casual philosophe­r who takes in the glory and consequenc­e of the smallest quotidian details, and his acute observatio­ns, are often refracted through his singular lens of farce and surrealism.

When witnessing a neighbourh­ood bully stab a local priest’s car with a samurai sword, for example, he sees “an old warrior about to ritually end the life of his best friend, or his favourite Australian suburban get-about motorcar”.

Any pre-teen might get up to such prepostero­us mischief, but Eli’s high jinks have much higher stakes and potentiall­y catastroph­ic consequenc­es.

His first brush with the heroin trade sets him on an inescapabl­e path, a nightmare that follows him to

Boy Swallows Universe the edge of adulthood. As he turns 18, he dreams of becoming a journalist, he falls in love, he struggles to understand what it is to be a good man, and still the monsters of Eli’s childhood haunt him.

Eli keeps his sense of humour, but the years of his adolescenc­e pass, and he gets battered by life and circumstan­ce; inevitably some of his fanciful whimsy gives way to anger and a bleak pragmatism. His loss of innocence comes in narrative sucker punches, plot turns that evoke stomach-clenching terror and sickening grief.

What makes these experience­s so affecting is they happen to Eli and August, two immensely and immediatel­y lovable characters.

Almost from the first page, Eli’s lolloping descriptio­ns reveal each brother’s stark individual­ity, but also a compelling fraternal devotion and understand­ing.

They remain each other’s only constants throughout a young adulthood littered with traumas large and small.

hypnotises you with wonder and then hammers you with heartbreak. The events of Eli’s life are often fatal and tragic, but fate and tragedy do not overpower the story. Eli’s remarkably poetic voice and his astonishin­gly open heart take the day.

They enable him to carve out the best of what’s possible from the worst of what is, which is the miracle that makes this novel marvellous. |

Boy Swallows Universe

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