Sunday, December 22, 2024

The six books our critics couldn’t put down this month

Must read

Another month, another slew of incredible books that take us from Noongar country to Ireland and South Africa, from behind the bars of a detention centre to a suburban cul-de-sac.

Our trusted gang of avid readers — The Book Show’s Claire Nichols and Sarah L’Estrange, ABC Arts’ Nicola Heath, and critics Declan Fry and Rosie Ofori Ward — have picked their favourites for you.

All read voraciously and widely, and the only guidelines we give them are: make it a new release; make it something you think is great.

Safe Haven by Shankari Chandran

Ultimo Press

“Storytelling is really powerful, particularly in the context of communities, cultures and peoples whose capacity to tell the truth has been limited, if not erased, by oppressive regimes, war, displacement and genocide,” Chandran told the Sydney Writers Festival.(Supplied: Ultimo Press)

Writing the follow-up to an award-winning novel is notoriously difficult. But it would seem that’s not so for Shankari Chandran, who has published her third novel, Safe Haven, 12 months after winning the 2023 Miles Franklin for Chai Time at Cinnamon Gardens.

With its twee title and cover, Chai Time surprised some readers with its often graphic descriptions of atrocities committed during Sri Lanka’s civil war and an unforgiving depiction of racism in Australia. Safe Haven covers similar territory.

The book opens with a transcript of an emergency call made by a Tamil Sri Lankan nun, Sister Serafina Daniels, to the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA). The boat she is aboard is sinking, and AMSA alerts the nearest vessel to go to the aid of the ‘suspected illegal entry vessel’.

If this episode sounds familiar, it’s because it’s based on real life. In 2009, Tamil asylum seeker Para Paheer called Australian authorities for help when the boat he was on began sinking in the middle of the Indian Ocean. Paheer was one of 27 asylum seekers rescued from the water by a passing tanker; 12 more tragically died.

Chandran draws directly from this story, as well as the Biloela community’s high-profile campaign to save the Nadesalingam family from deportation.

Safe Haven’s narrative picks up four years after the dramatic ocean rescue. Sister Fina is at Port Camden, a stand-in for the real-life detention centre on Christmas Island. But she’s there as a visitor, not as a detainee.

After she arrived in Australia as an asylum seeker, she was granted a Safe Haven Enterprise Visa and has made a new life in the rural town of Hastings, in far-western New South Wales. She visits Port Camden every three months to administer pastoral care to detainees — some of whom were her fellow passengers.

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