What’s
it about?
Joe lives—despite
himself. Driven by the need to atone for the neglect of a single tragic
summer’s night, he works at nothing jobs and, in his spare time, trains his
body and mind to conquer the hostile environment that took his love and smashed
up his future. So when a breathless girl turns up on the doorstep, why
does he let her in? Isn’t he done with love and hope?
On the other side of
the city, graphic designer Elise is watching her marriage bleed out. She
retreats to the only place that holds any meaning for her—the tiger enclosure
at the zoo—where, for reasons she barely understands, she starts to sketch the
beautiful killers.
LEAP is a beautiful
urban fairytale about human and animal nature, and the transformative power of
grief. While at its heart is a searing absence, this haunting and addictive
novel is propelled by an exhilarating life force, and the eternally hopeful promise
of redemptive love.
Why read
it?
Review
courtesy Alan Vaarwerk (editorial assistant at Readings
Monthly http://www.readings.com.au/review/leap-by-myfanwy-jones)
Three
years on from a tragedy that claimed the love of his life, twenty-something Joe
loses himself in menial work, parkour and his mentorship of a teenage
delinquent, using burnout and exhaustion as a coping mechanism. When a
beautiful nurse temporarily moves into his spare room and a mysterious Facebook
profile wants to reminisce about his dead girlfriend, he begins to wonder if
there is more out there for him.
Meanwhile,
middle-aged artist Elise becomes obsessed with the tigers at Melbourne Zoo,
visiting them in a secret weekly ritual that allows her an escape from her
crumbling marriage and her own spiralling sense of loss that threatens to
overtake everything.
Myfanwy
Jones’ writing pulses, pushed along with an irrepressible dynamism that echoes
its protagonists. Rather than wallowing in self-pity or drug-addled
self-destruction, what makes Joe’s character so compelling is his nihilistic
energy and battle against his own ambition.
Jones
captures with a real clarity the swirling mix of rage, hope and world-weariness
of the millennial male. This energy make’s Joe’s narrative arguably the
stronger of the two, but it’s thrown into relief by Elise’s quieter, more
introspective storyline.
The women
in Joe’s life, to varying degrees, seem intent on redeeming him – pushing back
against his guilt, grief and insistence that he’s not worth their trouble. The
nurse who moves in is unnamed and interacts with no-one else in the novel –
deliberately one-dimensional, transient, barely real. But then there are other
characters, like Joe’s co-worker Lena, so vibrant and full of life they
practically leap off the page.
While the
narrative at times feels a little crowded with motifs and characters, some left
unresolved, each element is enjoyable and contributes to the boisterous,
buzzing tone of the novel. Stylistically similar to the most recent novels of
Chris Flynn and Chris Womersley, Leap is a pleasure to read and a compelling
piece of Australian contemporary fiction.
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