Everything will come
crashing down.
pp.249
Publisher: Oneworld, 2014
Told in a series of single-page lyrical vignettes, with the
title of each vignette on the facing page, Deborah Kay Davies’ latest novel is
a tightly drawn and impressive read. It is about a strange young girl, Pearl,
growing up amid the internal fury of her family home. Her erratically behaved
mother is often struck down by a mysterious illness that confines her to bed or
results in her acting violently towards Pearl and The Blob (an unaffectionate
nickname Pearl gives to her younger brother). Pearl’s disdainful behaviour
towards her mother in return creates a significant division through the family,
and when Pearl becomes overly affectionate towards her father and tries to get
her mother out of the picture, their world very quickly collapses.
Pearl is one of the most fascinating characters I have come
across this year. She is tremendously cruel and vindictive. Upon meeting a girl
called Honey, Pearl wrestles her to the ground, tells her to open her mouth and
‘gathers spit with her tongue and allows it to fall in a series of slow bubbles
into Honey’s mouth. Now swallow, she tells her, or else.’ This is a rite of
passage Pearl puts the girl through in order for them to become friends. There
seems no end to Pearl’s pointlessly cruel antics, and yet very occasionally she
shows traits of kindness (particularly to her brother), deep yearning desire
(directed at her father), or deflated regret (at suddenly ending the
relationship with her boyfriend, Will).
It is easy to find oneself hating Pearl and then feeling a
quick pang of sorrow or sadness for her. In the section entitled ‘Shed’, there
is a particularly heart-breaking image painted of the girl looking after her brother
during one of her mother’s manic breakdowns. Pearl steals food from the kitchen
and she and her brother sit eating in the shed in the garden. Their mother
bursts out wielding a knife and Pearl shields her brother, waiting for their father
‘to come and save them’.
A risk Davies takes with the form is how she can make all
the separate parts of this novel cohere, yet she manages it elegantly. The
progression from beginning to end is tense and interesting. As we try to work
out the meaning of Pearl’s cruelty, and of the little skeleton girl she sees
from time to time, we suddenly realise that Davies is building up to something
intensely moving, a denouement where everything will come crashing down.
Easily read in one or two sittings, this short novel will
compel you to read just another section, and then another, and then another. It
is beautifully written as it portrays the arc of a girl’s childhood as she
struggles with the dark reality of the family unit.
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