If you love Patrick White (and I do) you will want to read this posthumous publication of an unfinished work by the great novelist. The 215 pages of this work actually represents only the first part of a projected three-part novel which unfortunately was not completed, owing to other pressing social, political and theatrical work in which White was preoccupied with at the end of his life. This is a draft of that first third of his book, something he had written comparatively quickly, and with which he admitted to friends he was generally pleased.
The setting is WWII, but set in Australia. As usual, his two main protagonists have developed special insights peculiar to themselves (see also my review of Happy Valley). Irene Sklavos is the daughter of a Sydney woman and a Greek father, a Communist who has been executed in a Greek prison. Her mother needs to return to continue the struggle in Greece. Gilbert Horsfall’s father is a Colonel, fighting in the war. During the Blitz on London, Gilbert’s mother and his best friend Nigel are killed. As was common at that time, these ‘orphaned’ children were despatched to the care of foster parents in far-away Sydney, where it was hoped they would be safe from what was happening in Europe. When the two children meet, despite their differences, they recognise a common affinity to special awareness…
This first part of the projected novel concentrates on the two children, particularly Irene, and how they cope with the people in the new country they have been sent to, their different schooling, and the acquaintances they are more or less forced to make. Both are aware of the Australians cultural ‘differences’ they need to deal with, and this contributes to their budding common awareness and special friendship. As time passes, Irene seems apparently more self-possessed and self-aware; but Gilbert increasingly appears to need to deny his internal reality and mimic instead what he considers to be his uncouth Australian school companions, at least in his external actions. This first part ends with the announcement of the end of the War, and the presumption is that the two children will be more completely physically separated than they already are, and perhaps forever.
What White might have had in mind for the remaining two parts of the novel are anyone’s guess: the only clue appears to be that he intended the relationship between Irene and Gilbert to continue for at least 36 years, and probably to find them back together in Sydney in 1981 — but speculation is pointless. It doesn’t matter, really, although what White might have come up with is tantalising, especially for someone who has read and relished his other work. This first part draft still resonates with White’s concerns and preoccupations, and his writing, even in draft form, is as powerful, moving, and observant as in his other works.
This book has been transcribed unedited from White’s handwritten manuscript. Whether White would have retained this first part as it now stands is a moot point: what we have, instead, is something unique: an unprecedented insight into the workings of a great novelist.