Wood Green by Sean Rabin

How does it feel to be told by an aspiring novelist that they’ve written a book, but regretted its protagonist is a writer? Some might think that writers are a dull bunch, but Sean Rabin’s Wood Green proves otherwise. Michael Pollard, an academic who completed his PhD on the obscure and reclusive novelist Lucian Clarke, is employed to be his secretary in Wood Green, a town in the shadows of Mount Wellington, Tasmania. Without boots to walk in, with no phone reception and amongst a raft of small-town characters, Michael becomes absorbed by the languid nights of pot-infused conversations, culinary delights and obscure records. But Lucian is a cantankerous man, keeping strict routines and demanding his employee to think harder. His task? To help the ageing writer remember his life by sorting a lifetime of discarded papers and connecting the known facts with his vast novels of complex imagination. As the narrative delves deeper, both men become more uncertain, obsessed and exhausted.

Insights into writing roll off the page and these are the most enjoyable passages of the novel. Coupled with a backdrop of bush walks, gourmet dishes, B&Bs and country pubs, there is a cosiness to the book, almost a glossy postcard for the chilly green isle. But what lurks beneath is more shadowy – and surprising. The shroud of mist and mystique Rabin creates is reminiscent of DBC Pierre’s Breakfast with the Borgias, and those that relish such plot twists will not be disappointed. Others who find trickery in fiction frustrating will perhaps find the novel more illuminating with the knowledge that Lucian Clark didn’t give a damn about reality in his work. Which is, perhaps, the point. Even though it’s writers we are reading about, whose story is being told?


Luke May is a freelance reviewer.

Cover image for Wood Green

Wood Green

Sean Rabin

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