Book Of The Month April, 2008

The Other Side of the BridgeMary Lawson

Two brothers, Arthur and Jake, are the sons of a local farmer in the mid-1930s, when life is tough and another world war is looming. Arthur is reticent, solid, dutiful, set to inherit the farm and his father s character; Jake is younger, attractive, mercurial and dangerous to know. A young woman, Laura, comes into the community and tips the fragile balance of sibling rivalry over the edge And then there is Ian, son of the local doctor, much younger, thoughtful, idealistic, and far too sure that he knows the difference between right and wrong. By now it is the Fifties, and the world has changed a little, but not enough. The stories of these two generations in the small town of Struan and its harsh rural hinterland are tragically interlocked, linked by fate and community but separated by a war which devours its young men and whose unimaginable horror reaches right into the heart of this remote corner of an empire. Lawson has an astonishing ability to turn the ratchet of tension slowly and delicately, building to a shocking climax. Taut with apprehension, surprising the reader with moments of tenderness and humour, The Other Side of the Bridge is a compelling, humane and vividly evoked novel with an irresistible emotional undertow.

Reading guide

“Have your say”

Latest Comment

Be the first to comment, use the form below

Make your own comment

What We Think

Mary Lawson, author of The Other Side of the Bridge, in praise of reading groups:

To understand why I’m such a fan of reading groups, you first need to know how I spend my days.

I get up, come downstairs, switch on the kettle, switch on my computer (it lives in our kitchen/living room), check my emails (hoping for something urgent to divert me from writing), open whichever chapter I’m working on, make the tea and toast, sit down in front of the computer … and stay there. I don’t stop for lunch, though I do try to break for some exercise mid-afternoon. I generally pack up about 6 and that’s it for the day. The next day I do the same. And the next.

It takes me a good five years to write a book and all that time I never know if it is going to ‘work’ and be worth publishing or if I should just stick it straight in the bin. If when it’s finished the publisher likes it, that is, of course, a good sign and a huge relief, but even that doesn’t guarantee that the book will be read. And that is what writers want more than anything else – more than money, more than fame, more than good reviews (not that we’d turn such things down if they came our way, you understand) – we want to be read.

Imagine then, at the end of all that effort and uncertainty and chewing-of-nails, being invited to go to speak about your book to a reading group. That means someone has read it! And the most wonderful thing about it is that reading groups read books because they want to; they have no axes to grind, they are not paid to read or review or praise or pull apart your book. They are made up of real readers, who are interested enough in books to come out of an evening at the end of a long day just to talk about them, and if an author is present, to ask the author questions.

I think it’s true to say that it wasn’t until I started giving readings and talks to reading groups that I really believed I was a writer. Until then I hadn’t thought of myself in those terms; I was just trying to write a book, like (it seemed) everyone else in the western world, with no real belief that it would ever be published. When I finally finished it (this was Crow Lake) I began sending it out to literary agents, who promptly sent it back. It was turned down by one agent after another for three solid years, so that when it was finally accepted I had the greatest difficulty believing it. When I first saw it on a shelf in a bookstore I was more dazed than thrilled. And then I had a phone call from a friend of a friend who belonged to a reading group not far from where I lived, wondering if I would come along and talk about the book. I said I wasn’t sure what I could say – writing is an extremely boring process. She said there were questions they were dying to ask; would I mind just coming and reading a bit and then answering people’s questions. I went, apprehensively, not knowing what to expect, and came away elated, delighted, inspired – but sobered too.

It was the perceptiveness and range of the questions that impressed me so much. The seriousness with which people took the book, the way they related the themes of the story to themes in their own lives. Someone said that reading Crow Lake had made her look again at the relationships within her own family. She realized she’d been unfair to one of her sons, she said. He’d left home long since, but she had written to him and apologized. That really gave me pause.

I don’t know why it surprised me that she and others in the group took the book so seriously. After all, I take books seriously too – I do believe that fiction helps us make sense of our lives. It just hadn’t occurred to me that anything I had written would receive that kind of attention.

In the past six years, in all kinds of reading groups, discussing both Crow Lake and The Other Side of the Bridge, the experience of that evening has been repeated again and again. Perceptive, thoughtful comments and questions from people who really think about what they read. It has been wonderful, but more than that, it has made a difference to how I view my own work. I think harder about everything I write now. I’m aware that there are a lot of serious readers out there; if my ideas aren’t properly thought out or the writing isn’t up to scratch, they’ll notice.

Some of my personal favourites:

Saint Maybe by Anne Tyler

What a fantastic story teller Anne Tyler is! Pick up any of her books and within a paragraph you are totally absorbed in her world. I love all of them, but my absolute favourite is Saint Maybe. It concerns the Bedloe family, “the ideal, apple-pie household: two amiable parents, three good-looking children, a dog, a cat, a scattering of goldfish.” Those two little words, “apple pie”, give the game away – you know a bombshell is going to hit that family and it does. To say what it is would spoil the story; sufficient to say it leaves Ian, the younger son, with such a load of guilt to carry that you think he’ll never be able to stand upright again. Essentially Saint Maybe is Ian’s story, but all of the characters are gripping, and all of them are so real you feel they must live next door.

Open Secrets by Alice Munro

For my money, Alice Munro is the best short story writer alive. In the space of a few sentences she can create a living, walking, breathing human being; in the space of a few pages she can tell you the story of his or her life. Her characters are ordinary people, but in reading about them you realize that no one is ordinary. The big issues, the great themes – love, death, triumph, failure – are present in all of our lives. She doesn’t pull her punches and there are no artificially happy endings to her stories, but they feel ‘right’, and that rightness is very satisfying. At the end of one of the tales in this collection, a woman whose life has not been entirely happy decides that the time has come to make a major change. Munro writes, “She was glad of a fresh start, her spirits were hushed and grateful. She had made fresh starts before and things had not turned out as she had hoped, but she believed in the swift decision, the unforeseen intervention, the uniqueness of her fate.” That’s Alice Munro’s gift to her readers – she lets them see the uniqueness of their fate.

Slaughterhouse Five – Kurt Vonnegut

I was in my twenties when I first read Slaughterhouse Five. I had never read anything remotely like it before, and with the exception of other books by the same author, I’ve never read anything like it since. Vonnegut has a unique voice and this is his masterpiece. It concerns the fire-bombing of Dresden during the Second World War. A terrible subject, and one Vonnegut knew at first hand – he was a Prisoner of War in Dresden at the time. Man’s inhumanity to man is a recurrent theme of his and his rage against it is savage, but he is so funny, and his touch is so light, that it is almost impossible to be depressed by anything he writes. “All this happened, more or less,” he begins in Slaughterhouse Five. “The war parts, anyway, are pretty much true. One guy I knew really was shot in Dresden for taking a teapot that wasn’t his.” The story is short – you can read it in an afternoon – but it will stay with you for life.

Have your say

Please read the code of conduct prior to posting your comment.

Book of the month archive

To Kill A Mockingbird: 50th Anniversary edition - June 2010 Conspirator - May 2010 The House of Special Purpose - April 2010 The Mango Orchard: Travelling back to the secret heart of Mexico - March 2010 The Day the Falls Stood Still - February 2010 Blacklands - January 2010 A Christmas Carol - December 2009 The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas - November 2009 Crime - October 2009 Ma, I'm Gettin Meself a New Mammy - September 2009 Paying For It - July 2009 Hammer - May 2009 Lottery: The Fortunes and Misfortunes of Perry L. Crandall - March 2009 War and Peace - February 2009 Something Might Happen - January 2009 The Master Bedroom - December 2008 The Scandal of the Season - November 2008 The Road Home - October 2008 The Devil Within: A Memoir of Depression - September 2008 Mudbound - August 2008 Birds Without Wings - July 2008 Gods Behaving Badly - June 2008 All This Is Mine - May 2008 The Other Side of the Bridge - April 2008 Ishq And Mushq - March 2008 Before I Die - March 2008 The Last Family In England - February 2008 The Swimming Pool Season - January 2008 Music & Silence - January 2008 The Way I Found Her - January 2008 The Colour - January 2008 The Darkness Of Wallis Simpson - January 2008 In A Good Light - January 2008 Brave New World - December 2007 The Man Who Smiled - December 2007 The Invisible Wall - December 2007 Jane Eyre - November 2007 Death In Danzig - November 2007 Honor And Evie - November 2007 The Darkness Of Wallis Simpson - October 2007 Going Under - September 2007 Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass - August 2007 Yoga School Dropout - August 2007 Kafka On The Shore - July 2007 Suite Francaise - June 2007 The Naked Drinking Club - June 2007 Fun Home - June 2007 Fangland - June 2007 Triptych - June 2007 A Spot of Bother - June 2007 My Life So Far - June 2007 Gentlemen & Players - May 2007 The Learning Curve - May 2007 A Country Wife - May 2007 Alentejo Blue - April 2007 The Whole World Over - March 2007 My Life So Far - February 2007 Little Infamies - January 2007 Patsy Of Paradise Place - December 2006 The Pursuit Of Happiness - November 2006 Diane Arbus - October 2006 The Devil's Star - September 2006 Down Daisy Street - August 2006 Silence Of The Grave - July 2006 The Horrific Sufferings Of The Mind-Reading: Monster Hercules Barefoot, his... - June 2006 Autobiography Of A Geisha - May 2006 The Private World of Georgette Heyer - April 2006 Don't Move - March 2006 Smashed: Growing Up A Drunk Girl - February 2006 Just One More Day - January 2006 Atomised - December 2005 Death And The Penguin - November 2005 Kafka On The Shore - October 2005 Calling Out For You - September 2005 Pompeii - August 2005 Birds Without Wings - July 2005 A Round-Heeled Woman - June 2005 Love - May 2005 Yellow Dog - April 2005 The Hamilton Case - March 2005 Trainspotting - February 2005
Author's Place

At AuthorsPlace, we’ve invited our authors to create their own unique profile pages… Register on Authors Place now!