Foto dell'autore

Briohny Doyle

Autore di The Island Will Sink

4 opere 74 membri 2 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Briohny Doyle is a Melbourne-based writer and academic. She was born on April 27, 1983. Her work has appeared in publications like The Lifted Brow, Overland, Going Down Swinging and Meanjin, among others, and she has performed her work at the Sydney Festival and at the Museum of Contemporary Art, mostra altro Sydney. Her debut novel is entitled The Island Will Sink and is due out in August 2016. (Bowker Author Biography) mostra meno

Comprende il nome: Briohny Doyle PhD

Opere di Briohny Doyle

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Sesso
female
Nazionalità
Australia
Nazione (per mappa)
Australia

Utenti

Recensioni

I’m not sure how best to describe Echolalia by Briohny Doyle, perhaps as a literary domestic suspense. Set in an outer suburban Australia the timeline of Echolalia shifts ‘Before’ and ‘After’ the night Emma Cormac left her infant son alone by a dried up lake.

In the before, Emma is married to Robert Cormac, the princely only son of local wealthy construction developers, and installed in the expansive home he built for them. It’s the stuff of fairytales for Emma, who is from a far less affluent background, which only begins to sour with the birth of their second child, a son who is quickly diagnosed with a hereditary disorder, and viewed as a blot on the Cormac family name. Seeking redemption for what is perceived as her failure to provide a suitable heir, barely eighteen months later Emma presents her husband wth a healthy son, Robbie.

After, Emma’s children, Clem and Arthur, are young adults who have not seen their mother since the night baby Robbie died. While Arthur has made a life for himself far from the influence of the Cormac’s, Clem remains haunted by all she does not know.

Echolalia is a bleak tale, commenting on climate change, capitalism, class, privilege, legacy, patriarchy, trauma and motherhood. I found the ‘Before’ to be more compelling than the ‘After’, which feels somewhat unresolved.

Emma’s emotions are viscerally portrayed as she becomes increasingly fragile, both emotionally and physically. Her sense of self already vague, it disintegrates under the expectations of the family she has into married to. Drifting unheeded towards the inevitable tragedy, it’s clear Emma is suffering from post natal depression which tips into psychosis.

In their relationship with Emma, while her husband Robert is perhaps at best myopic, his mother Pat is wilfully insensitive, and Robert’s cousin, Shane, is pointedly cruel. These attitudes are also echoed in their business dealings as the wield their wealth and power in ways which are both careless and deliberate. In the aftermath the Cormac’s accept no responsibility, Emma and the loss of Robbie, a convenient scapegoat for everything that then befalls them.

With its crisp and evocative prose, Echolalia is a raw, poignant and unsettling novel that left me uncomfortable, but thoughtful.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
shelleyraec | Jun 22, 2021 |
A brilliantly articulated collection of essays about the elusiveness of identifying as an adult, in a voice that is particularly relatable for millennials.
 
Segnalato
polyreaderamy | Jun 11, 2018 |

Premi e riconoscimenti

Statistiche

Opere
4
Utenti
74
Popolarità
#238,154
Voto
½ 3.3
Recensioni
2
ISBN
15
Lingue
1

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