Dreaming the Enemy by David Metzenthen (Allen &
Unwin) PB RRP $19.99 ISBN 9781760112257
Reviewed by
Dianne Bates
The lives of
thousands of young Australian men were changed in the 1960s when names were
drawn from a ballot so they could be sent to fight in the war in Vietnam.
Johnny (Shoey) Shoebridge, the protagonist in Metzenthen’s latest novel, is a returned
Vietnam vet, who suffers PTSD.
The reader
is taken inside Shoey’s head as he tries to rationalize his time in war and as
he wonders about fitting into post-war life.
Desperately he tries to build his sense of self in the aftermath of a
horrific episode in his life when he was ordered to kill. He constantly
re-visits the battlegrounds and becomes obsessed with a Viet Cong ghost-fighter
called Khan.
Disassociating,
Shoey ‘sees’ Khan and others – Thang and Trung – his mind constantly switching
from the Vietnam jungle to the present when he is alone in a fishing hut trying
to recover. Shoey has, writes Metzenthen, ‘amassed a dose of fury’ and ‘his
scars were like armour.’ In ‘the dark pressing reaches of his mind,’ he recalls
everything he knew in war from ‘a severed brown hand found after a firefight’
to ‘a smack of a bullet hitting a jaw.’ The reader reaches inside Shoe’s
hyper-vigilant mind and roots for him to ‘move on’ which his family and friends
urge him to do. But of course it is not as easy as simply wanting to do this.
This
confronting book will challenge any sensitive reader. Metzenthen
is a fine writer who is skilled at characterisation, writing with flair,
elegance and beautifully crafted sentences. This is a deeply moving novel by
one of Australia’s top YA authors which is sure to enthrall (mostly) boy
readers aged 13 years and up. It wouldn’t be surprising to see Dreaming the Enemy being short-listed
for literary awards.
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