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After Battersea Park
by Jonathan Bennett
Raincoast Books, 2001

Review by Mark Sampson

Two young men. Twin brothers separated at birth. Thousands of miles apart and yet sharing a similar life trajectory, a similar need to make sense of their worlds. Both are artists—one a jazz musician and the other a visual artist. Both strive to make connections—with women, with careers, with themselves and with something greater than themselves. Then, after a ill-timed suicide and a series of near coincidences, the brothers do meet, and are given the opportunity to come to terms with their pasts and, consequently, their futures.

In lesser-skilled hands, this scenario would conclude with a kind of hackneyed happiness, a predictably pat ending where both young men use each other to “figure out” themselves. But in first-time novelist Jonathan Bennett’s hands, we’re given something much richer, much truer. After Battersea Park shows us the indelible struggle between the need for autonomy and the need to belong to something, and how even after finding something to belong to, we don’t necessarily solve the problems we face as individuals. This is a touching, often humourous novel of the young male experience, of finding connectedness within disconnectedness.

The book’s strongest element is its constant imagery of dualism as brothers Curt, a struggling jazz musician in Sydney, Australia, and William, a visual artist in Toronto, claw through life trying to find happiness and success. Both brothers develop romances with older women as a way of dealing with the ambiguous relationships with their respective exes. Both work day jobs to support their art. And both must leave their particular comfort zones—Canada and Australia—to meet their biological parents on the neutral ground of Hawaii. Bennett executes this parallel construction beautifully, drawing not only links between Curt and William but also links between the struggles of artist expression and facing manhood.

This is also a wonderfully youthful novel, full of basement apartments, day jobs, dashed idealism and tenuous relationships. Readers in their twenties (or ones who have survived their twenties) will relate to the unforgiving ride the two main characters are on. Dealing with dinner dates, infidelity and eccentric parents adds an insouciant quality to the short, precision chapters of this book.

After Battersea Park does have its flaws, however. William’s life and background are better realized than Curt’s, and thus more interesting. There are times when Bennett’s expression of youthful artistic angst comes off as, well, youthful artistic angst. Many readers (myself not included) may also find that the author pushes the “image of dualism” button a little too much, constantly reminding the reader that the images, the metaphors of the book are just as “twinned” as the brothers are.

Despite these weaknesses, Bennett shows tremendous control over his narrative and provides several great themes for readers to explore. The novel touches on the Canadian and Australian relationship with England and the United States, a parent-child relationship similar to that of Curt and William’s relationship with their biological parents. There is also a commentary on the traditional nuclear family unit here, particularly when the brothers sit down in a restaurant for their first meal with their biological parents. The conversation of this piecemeal family, whose lives could not be any more different or separate, is nearly drowned out by the banal ramblings of another, far more traditional family sitting at the next table.

The ending of After Battersea Park is refreshing and unexpected without being too pessimistic. Ultimately, Curt and William don’t find a whole lot in each other that says anything about themselves. And yet there is a wonderful scene near the end where the two men are in a piano bar, working as a tandem in their respective art forms, Curt playing jazz music on the piano while William sketches at the table. For one short moment the men are inseparable, a cohesive unit in a world as fractured as it’s always been. It may not make you believe in brotherly love, but it will show you how two things can fit together even when they are so very far apart.

Mark Sampson worked as a journalist and editor in Halifax, Nova Scotia before moving to Winnipeg in 2000, where he is doing an MA in English Literature and Creative Writing at the University of Manitoba.

 

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The Danforth Review is produced in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. All content is copyright of the person who created it and cannot be copied, printed, or downloaded without the consent of that person. See the masthead on the submissions page for editorial information. All views expressed are those of the writer only. International submissions are encouraged. The Danforth Review is archived in the Library and Archives Canada. ISSN 1494-6114. 

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