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Fiction
by Milly Main
September 2012, no. 344

Fault Lines  by Pierz Newton-John

Spineless Wonders, $19.99 pb, 173 pp, 9780987089762

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In this collection of short stories from Pierz Newton-John, the author calls upon the suburban familiarity of a garden weed: couch grass, the fast-spreading pest whose rhizomes grow rapidly in a suffocating network, until the area it covers is ‘strangled’ and the custodian must ‘pull up the entire intractable tangle and start again’. This network of affliction that spreads throughout Newton-John’s characters – disaffection, self-denial, drug dependency, turmoil, ambivalence, sheer despair – is handled nimbly by Newton-John, who wields a superb descriptive talent. Each story ends with the dislodging of some kind of rot, or the threat of destruction, because a situation is no longer sustainable.

 


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Fault Lines  by Pierz Newton-John

Spineless Wonders, $19.99 pb, 173 pp, 9780987089762

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


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