Reviewed by Peter Kemp
Attend an evening with Andre Agassi
Outsiders and outlaws have always appealed to Peter Carey’s imagination. So have story lines that go wide-rangingly walkabout. In his fiction, con men and convicts, refugees and bushrangers crisscross Australia’s vast land-mass. Misfits, from transported felons to Victorian eccentrics disastrously addicted to gambling, embark on voyages across the globe. His Illegal Self – a return to form for Carey after his two rather uncertain novels about forgery and fraud, My Life as a Fake (2003) and Theft (2006) – shows his talents assuredly getting back on track by accompanying more escapees on the run.
Opening in New York in 1972, the story swiftly travels, via fleeting touchdowns in Philadelphia, Seattle, Sydney and Brisbane, to the jungly recesses of Queenland’s rain forest. It is propelled there by the plight of Che Selkirk, the abandoned son of two radical militants whose bank-robbing and bomb-making activities have put them high on the FBI’s Most Wanted list.
For most of his life, carefully shielded from television and newspaper bulletins about his parents’ violent antics, seven-year-old Che has been under the guardianship of his grandmother, a wealthy Wasp gorgon whose imperious existence alternates between her Park Avenue apartment on the Upper East Side and a lakeside retreat in remote rural upstate New York. When she reluctantly permits Che a clandestine meeting with his mother – her deplored, renegade daughter – he is dramatically pulled into a very different world. The scarcely recognised young woman wearing Hindu necklaces and anklets tinkling with silver bells who now goes under the name of Dial (short for dialectic) whisks him off to the antipodes and a life that is the antithesis of the privileged one he has hitherto enjoyed.
Flashbacks, hints and delayed revelations gradually piece together a picture of what occurred on the day of his abduction, and ear-lier. But Carey’s prime focus is on what happens to Che and Dial amid the dense tangles of lantana shrub, vines as thick as arms and rampaging tropic vegetation hemming in the ramshackle hippie commune at Yandina, where they end up.
In this makeshift milieu, their arrival causes consternation. Spite and envy, jealousy and suspicion fester over lentil-laden meals and erupt in group assemblies, reeking of marijuana and patchouli oil, that are strident with counter-culture platitudes and pieties. Here, Dial – dismayed at becoming the target of regulation antiAmerican animus – finds an unlikely ally in a one-time Barnardo’s boy immigrant from south London, left twitchy with near-feral paranoia after the abuse he met with at a horrific Christian Brothers’ orphan farm in south Australia.
The slowly growing trust and rapport between him and Dial is nicely achieved in the novel, much of whose tough comedy comes from plunging a hyper-educated young woman, once the Alice May Twitchell Fellow at Vassar, into the trials and hard-earned satisfactions of the wilderness. One of the books Dial reads to an entranced Che during their odd odyssey is Jack London’s The Call of the Wild. In tribute to its canine hero who adapts triumphantly to being transferred from tameness to savage surroundings, Che gives the dog’s name, Buck, to a pet cat he acquires. But it is he and Dial who respond most resourcefully to drastic relocation.
Never letting you forget the hazards of their new habitat – cyclones upend trailer homes, two-inch-long ants with pincers as hard as steel lurk in the undergrowth, there are periodic raids on the commune by oafish Queensland police – Carey at the same time keeps you aware of its remarkable beauty. Sentences that resemble little imagist poems (“the wind blew and schools of eucalypt leaves turned like silver knives above her head”, “the tops and bottoms of paperbark trees were already drowning in the melancholy night”) decorate his narrative of his uprooted couple’s struggle for safety. The allure of the landscape as it glistens under gentle rain (“little pools of water gathering in the banana leaves, then spilling in a crystal rush you would never tire of”) is conjured up with lucid freshness.
This headily sensuous environment is one to which the tormented hero of Carey’s first novel, Bliss (1981) – written at an “alternative” commune in Yandina along with stories that appeared in his 1979 collection, War Crimes – journeyed in search of paradise.
Nine novels later, Carey has returned to the location in a vividly idiosyncratic narrative highlighting the concerns often central to the fiction he has produced over the past 25 years: tensions between Australia and colonising super-powers (a subject treated with especially inventive brio in his high-fantasy novel, The Unusual Life of Tristan Smith, 1994); the damage wreaked by corrupt authority (on striking display in Jack Maggs, 1997, and True History of the Kelly Gang, 2001, his recreations of 19th-century casualties of colonial cruelty); and childhood vulnerability (most searingly laid bare in The Tax Inspector, his 1991 shocker about a dysfunctional family). Complementing the last of these preoccupations with an engaging display of how parent-like protectiveness emotionally fulfils adults as well as nurturing children, His Illegal Self brims with robustly unsentimental likeability.
His illegal self by Peter Carey
Faber £16.99 pp272

Industry sectors news at a glance. Interactive heatmap, video and podcast
Everything the Business Traveller needs to know to make a better trip
Get ready for the winter sports season, with our resort guides and snow reports
We are backing British business, what is the confidence of the nation and what businesses are succeeding?
Growing demand for energy, oil that is harder to reach and the rise of carbon dioxide emissions. We examine the energy challenge
With rail travel in Europe on the rise, we review the benefits of travelling by train
In this special section we explore new food trends to help improve your dinner party and impress guests
Enjoy further reading from Travel to Fashion, Business to Sport, discover more
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles
1998
£47,955
12 months for the price of 11 and a 5% discount.
Offer ends 31/11/09
Check your free Experian credit report before applying
Car Insurance
to £60K + bonus (OTE £90k)
Lord Search & Selection
Location Flexible
PwC’s Consulting practice helps businesses of all shapes
and sizes work smarter and grow faster.
£85k
CPA
Highly Competitve
Specsavers
Whiteley, near Southampton
Moments from Battersea Park.
For sale with Winkworth
Find out about shared ownership.
See your free Experian credit report beforehand
7nts - Penang £499; Borneo £699; All Inclusive £799 including flights, taxes, accommodation and private transfers
For your ultimate tailor-made ski holiday, click here
Get covered on your travels with a superb range of policies at great prices. Visit InsureandGo.com
World Class Golf, Spa and preferential Beach Club. Private estate overlooking West Coast
Villas from £275 per night inclusive of Golf
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times, or place your advertisement.
Times Online Services: Dating | Jobs | Property Search | Used Cars | Holidays | Births, Marriages, Deaths | Subscriptions | E-paper
News International associated websites: Globrix Property Search | Milkround
Copyright 2009 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.