A finalist for Britain's
prestigious Booker Prize, The Hiding Place – Welsh novelist Trezza Azzopardi's
brilliantly lyrical tale of an immigrant family in the harbor town of Cardiff,
Wales - is turning the heads of readers and publishers around the world,
moving some critics to compare it to Frank McCourt's bleak, stirring memoir Angela's
Ashes. But The Hiding Place need not "hide" behind any ready-made comparisons;
Azzopardi's astonishing, tension-filled debut stands assuredly on its own as a
work of tremendous power and originality.
At times, The Hiding Place paints
a phantasmagoric portrait of cruelty, but Trezza Azzopardi's gracefully
exacting prose saves her tale from becoming a shock-fest of the sort you would
expect on daytime television talk shows. Azzopardi forges profundity through delicately
interwoven double-sided images: rabbits that are the children's playthings, until
they are brutally slaughtered by their father; trunks, rooms, and cages that
can either protect or ensnare; and most abundantly and most significantly,
fire, which can warm as well as ravage. Even Dolores's older sister Fran is
sent away to a home for being a pyromaniac, craving risk like her father,
"gambling on how hot, how high, on how long she can bear it."
While some readers may wonder how
Dolores is able to relate events that happened when she was so young, it is
easy to associate these stories with the phantom pains she feels in her missing
fingers, her ability to "miss something [she] never knew." The story comes
to us in a dreamlike tapestry, weaving together different times and
perspectives. Consequently, the
narrative is fragmented, leaving the reader with half-tellings, missing details,
stories that unfold only in the retelling, and a sense that the only fact we
can be certain of is the profound meaning she imparts through them. The Hiding Place is as
much a portrait of a family's destruction as it is an exploration of how memory
bends and buckles under the weight of ruin, and how "blame can be twisted
like a flame in draught; it will burn and burn."
Robyn S.
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