Laurinda by Alice Pung
(Black Inc)
PB RRP $14.99
ISBN
9781863956925
Reviewed by Dianne Bates
When I heard Alice Pung talking on radio
about her life, she was so interesting and articulate and amusing that I knew I
had to buy her latest book, which is this. However, the book is an enigma to
me. For a start, Black Inc is known for publishing only adult novels. So I don’t
know where this book fits into its list. It’s not a typical YA novel though the
narrator, Lucy Lim, is aged fifteen and writing about her year as a scholarship
student at a prestigious girls’ college. What the problem for me is the style
and sophistication of the narrative. The writing is excellent; overall I
enjoyed reading the book. But I’m curious to know what teenage reader would
make of it.
Throughout the book, Lucy addresses what
seems to be a close friend, Linh. It was only towards the end of the story that
I realised that Linh is her Chinese name, Lucy her westernised name. The whole
of the novel is about Linh’s navigation, and eventual transformation – from her
working-class roots in Stanley (‘a place of bogans’ where people are generally
poor) to Lucy who experiences learning (not all academic) in a wealthy school
where girls take their elevated status for granted. Lucy’s home life stands in
stark contrast to that of the young women at Laurinda which appears to be
dominated by what she calls ‘The Cabinet’. This is a trio of teenagers who
prove to be nasty and spiteful but who give the outward appearance of
conforming and seem to be an asset to the school and its principal, Mrs Grey
who seems to be under their thrall -- enough to say that the trio’s mothers run
the Alumnae Association and make massive donations to Laurinda.
Throughout the book – and this is really
at its heart – Lucy is constantly self-analysing and making judgments about
this alien world in which she finds herself. She is quiet and truthful and tries to fly
under the radar but the principal constantly sees her as not fulfilling her
potential. At home she sees her parents struggling to put food on the table (eating
meals from newspaper on the floor). Her mother runs an at-home business sewing
clothes while Lucy is often left to care for her beloved little brother, The
Lamb. At school she is befriended by a teacher, Mrs Leslie whom she admires and
who is kind to her – but the rub is that the woman is mother of one of The
Cabinet.
Matters come to a head when The Cabinet traumatises
a woman teacher they detest and later cast aspersions (in the form of sexual innuendos)
on a caring, effective male teacher. Lucy, whom The Cabinet has pretended to
befriend, removes herself from the group, but in the end she makes her feelings
known. And thus changes appear in the school ethos.
Will teenagers like this well-written and
very different book? I really can’t say. It’s not an adult novel or even a
cross-over novel -- therefore it must be for teenagers. I would love to have
some teen opinions!
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