Dystopian view of America from top author

Lionel Shriver: deliberately provocative. Photo: Eva Vermondel
Lionel Shriver: deliberately provocative. Photo: Eva Vermondel

THE MANDIBLES
Lionel Shriver
Borough Press/HarperCollins

By CUSHLA MCKINNEY

 

One of Lionel Shriver's defining characteristics as an author is her willingness to confront topical and divisive issues. The Mandibles is no exception and I would rate this novel among one of her best.

It opens in a near-future America that has defaulted on its debts, renationalised all gold (including jewellery), and made holding or trading in international currency illegal. Rampant inflation and a stockmarket crash have wiped out entire fortunes and, for perhaps the first time since British settlers arrived on the continent, everybody truly is equal under God. The irony being, of course, that the US is no longer the country the rest of the world wants to come to but the place everybody wants to leave.

Set against this broader geopolitical scenario, the Mandibles family are a synecdoche through which the ramifications of events can be explored at the individual level. The family are the inheritors of a substantial fortune, watched over by the 97-year old patriarch, Douglas, whose demise will see its distribution trickle down through several generations. His son, Carter, plays the dutiful child, regularly visiting his father and dementia-ridden stepmother in the upper class retirement home where they reside, while his daughter Nollie lives - not unlike Shriver - in self-imposed exile abroad.

Meanwhile Carter's children, who resemble the three princes so frequently encountered in fairy tales, have made their own way in the world. Avery, a "new age'' therapist, lives in moneyed comfort, having married to a tenured economics professor, while her sister Florence works at an emergency housing shelter and struggles to meet her mortgage payments, and college drop-out Jarred has used his unspent education fund to buy a farm.

As the economy collapses, four generations of Mandibles slowly trickle their way into Florence's tiny house and, when they lose even this minimal refuge, set off across country to work for Jarred. These events, which take place over the course of a few months in 2029, take up the bulk of the story.

The plot is an engrossing one and by combining a broad range of characters with an eye-of-god narrative, Shriver presents a broad range of responses ranging from Avery's husband, Lowell (who spends his time railing against those defeatists whose refusal to recognise this as a temporary downturn has become a self-fulfilling prophecy) to Florence's son, a watchful and practical boy who is one of the few members of the family to recognise and prepare for the practicalities of living in the new America.

Shriver's sympathies are clear; she has little time for the pontification of economists of any stripe, nor for the affluent white middle class as exemplified by Lowell and Avery. The admirable characters are those who do "real'' work (and writers), with nirvana represented, apparently, by a tax-free state in which family rather than the State provides the social safety net. Some of this is, I suspect, is Shriver being deliberately provocative, but I enjoyed the challenge and, in light of recent events, the scenario she paints suddenly feels frighteningly plausible.

Cushla McKinney is a Dunedin scientist.

WIN A COPY

The ODT  has five copies  of  The Mandibles, by Lionel Shriver, to give away courtesy of the Borough Press and HarperCollins. For your chance to win a copy, email helen.speirs@odt.co.nz with your name and postal address  in the body of the email,  and ‘‘Mandibles Book Competition’’ in the subject line, by 5pm on Tuesday, August 9.

LAST WEEK’S WINNERS

Winners of last week’s giveaway,  Barkskinsby  Annie Proulx,  also courtesy of HarperCollins, were: Dorothy Soper,  of Milton,  Steve Moynihan, of Cromwell, and Rochelle Wales, Claire Arthur and Jenny Winter, all of Dunedin.

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