Occasionally I get a strong urge to hide under a duvet and wait for the world to go away. I suspect it wouldn't work, in the same way travelling to another country isn't always the escape you wish it was. You can leave your environment but you can't get away
Fiction Addiction: Escaping into 'There But For The'
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Book cover of There But For The. Photo / Supplied
At first she barely remembers Miles, whom she met on a trip to Europe as a teenager some 20 years earlier. But after she walks away from the house - in disgrace, having failed to entice the mystery man from the room - her memory forms our first picture of Miles, as a precociously witty and articulate teenager.
Anna begins to think about her life - and come back to life herself - as she ponders Miles' motivations: "Imagine the relief there'd be, in just stepping through the door of a spare room, a room that wasn't anything to do with you, and shutting the door, and that being that ... Would all the things you'd ever forgotten, all layered there inside you, come bouldering up and avalanche you? ... Was it some wanky kind of middle-class game about how we're all prisoners even though we believe we're free as a bird, free to cross any shopping mall or airport concourse or fashionably stripped back wooden floor of the upstairs room of a house."
I might not find the answer in the book, but I think I'm going to enjoy the journey. I'll share it with you as I continue to read it over the next few weeks.
But first, some housekeeping. When my mother-in-law watches a movie, she gets very concerned about the logistics. Her overriding reaction to the Lord of the Rings trilogy was to wonder where the great armies did their ablutions. So, Jenny, this is for you, since I know you'll be wondering: Miles had the foresight to choose a room with an en suite. And his reluctant hosts are pushing wafer-thin food under the door, chiefly ham and turkey because they know he's vegetarian and don't want him getting any more comfortable than he evidently is.
Thanks for all the thoughtful - and fun - questions you submitted for our authors to answer, in this month's competition. Copies of There But For The and Christine's read, Caleb's Crossing by Geraldine Brooks, will be going out to our winners: Helena Yang, Di Shaw and Dorothy Vinicombe. Look out for Geraldine Brooks' answers to your questions on Tuesday.