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Reviews for The Life of Nancy

 The Life of Nancy magazine reviews

The average rating for The Life of Nancy based on 2 reviews is 2 stars.has a rating of 2 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2010-08-06 00:00:00
2009was given a rating of 3 stars Stephen Spooner
Favorite story is "Custodian Port Blues" - really fun. Some of the more abstract ones like "Faces at the End of Time" didn't work for me, but I liked most of the longer ones like "The Ballad of Universal Jack" was very good and "A Time to Crawl" - at first I found it too heavy-handed, but I kept thinking about it and arguing with it, and went back to reread it. I'd like to see that world fleshed out with more detail.
Review # 2 was written on 2013-01-04 00:00:00
2009was given a rating of 1 stars Leslie Fernandes
Review published in the Dominion Post, 18 June 2005 Festival of Miracles Alice Tawhai (Huia Publishers, $29.99) Reviewed by Philippa Jamieson Expect to hear more from Alice Tawhai. This collection of 25 stories is her first book, and establishes her as a writer with an unmistakable talent for short fiction. She sets up a whole scenario, gets inside the heads of her characters and shows their worlds in just a few pages, with plenty of lines to read between, and things to ponder afterwards. There are celebrations here, and circuses, trips to the zoo and nights out at the pub. And there are miracles: the magic taro that cures baby Va'aka, the patuparehe at the marae, a mermaid, and communications with extra-terrestrials. The characters inhabiting these stories are a veritable United Nations of Aotearoa: many are Maori, but there are also Chinese, Pakeha, Pacific Islanders, Lebanese, Italian and Japanese, living in a whole lot of different places in New Zealand. Tawhai is particularly adept at seeing things through the eyes of children, with a combination of innocence, acceptance, and make-believe. 'Dawnie' captures with exquisite agony the awkwardness of a pubescent girl. In 'Perfect Things', three children discover a dead body, floating beautiful and serene in a pool, but this perfect image is shattered when adults come on the scene. 'Precious Alice' describes a co-dependent, destructive friendship between a fat girl and the beautiful but cruel Alice. The characters are real people, looking for magic in their lives, or dreaming or remembering it. But there are a fair few broken spells and disappointments. 'Pale Flower' introduces us to Sal, who gets into his Maoritanga, goes to te reo classes and becomes Herewini, but can't stop his missus going off with a Pakeha bloke. Of course, it doesn't help that he goes on the booze and beats her up. Tawhai is a mistress of understatement, using ordinary words to convey the main themes with subtlety: 'But Sal did things that got to me too. "Where have you been?" I'd ask him. "I went to a land hui last night," he'd say. "And today we just kicked back and discussed the issues." That meant he's been drinking. No wonder I always had to move back homeā€¦ I stayed lying on the kitchen floor, and that was the end of that go with Sal.' The power of this writing comes from the spaces between the words, made all the more poignant by the simple style, and leavened with a measure of whimsy.


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