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A Mysterious Box Arrives. Inside? The Dead Body of a Child Saint.
A Mysterious Box Arrives. Inside? The Dead Body of a Child Saint.

New York Times

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

A Mysterious Box Arrives. Inside? The Dead Body of a Child Saint.

LITTLE WORLD, by Josephine Rowe 'Little World' is a swoony, atmospheric, blink-and-you'll-miss-it short novel told through three interwoven stories. The Australian writer Josephine Rowe binds her disparate characters through a shared psychic connection to a very physical entity: the body of a child, incorruptible in death — 'a maybe-saint, a novitiate, a fledgling?' — who becomes a holy figure to those who encounter her. Though the novel is only 100 pages long, there is so much strange potential in its conceit that from the start it feels primed to deliver a massive world instead of a little one. The first section follows an aging man named Orrin across the well-worn grooves of his solitary life in rural Western Australia in the years after World War II. He inherits an antique canoe-timber box containing the corpse of the supposed child saint, from Kaspar, a Norwegian ex-lover whom he worked for in Micronesia 25 years earlier. The box is accompanied by an official letter listing the body's 'saintly characteristics': its 'heady, floral aroma, believed to be the odor of sanctity,' and 'the weeping of pink-tinged tears.' Orrin is not a believer, but he keeps the girl's miraculous body in his kitchen ('Catholic or not. You don't turn away a saint'), passing the time quietly between 'the brief colorless edges of the day,' worrying termites might get inside the wooden box and reflecting upon Kaspar, Orrin's parents and sister. Meanwhile, the saint's own vague memories stir, of her hard, short life, where sweetness was only ever found in the in-between moments, in playing with dogs, in 'the tug of her sister's fingers combing her hair.' These early passages shine with the promise of a delicately entwined story to come. But as soon as it finds its tempo, this first section ends, and the novel picks up with Mathilde, a listless 36-year-old insomniac who discovers Orrin's long-abandoned cottage — and inside it the body of the child saint — on a haphazard road trip to the west coast of Australia in the 1970s. Though she's accompanied on the trip by two well-heeled young lesbians, Mathilde's back story is as lonely as Orrin's and the saint's, lit only with tiny, radiant moments of real joy. Revisiting her past over and over into the night, she is haunted by the son she gave up for adoption as a teenager, as well as by her brief, bright romance with Sally, another unwed mother at the Catholic home where she spent her pregnancy. 'One grief rousts another,' Rowe writes, 'restless siblings turning over in a too-small bed.' After an abrupt, somewhat pat third section, which feels like an epilogue, or an extended universe for the characters we've come to know, the whole novel is done. If the end feels disappointing — and it does — it's because it doesn't quite live up to the vast possibilities Rowe has conjured through her affecting, sensual, otherworldly prose. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Catherine Chidgey and The Book of Guilt
Catherine Chidgey and The Book of Guilt

ABC News

time15-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • ABC News

Catherine Chidgey and The Book of Guilt

New Zealand author Catherine Chidgey asks, what if World War 2 had ended differently in her latest novel The Book of Guilt. Plus Kevin Wilson sends his characters on an American road trip in Run for the Hills and Australian author Josephine Rowe on her moving and slender novel, Little World. What if the second world war had ended differently? This idea and more are explored in Catherine Chidgey's latest novel The Book of Guilt which is set long after the end of the war in 1970s England. Catherine is a New Zealand writer best known for her novels The Wish Child and Remote Sympathy which are also about World War 2 and she reveals her interest in this dark period in European history dates to her time at high school. Run for the Hills is the latest novel by American author Kevin Wilson and it features his trademark quirkiness and heart. It's about a group of newly discovered siblings who take a road trip across the US to confront their father for abandoning them. Kevin says the seeds for this novel were sown in his previous novel, Now is Not the Time to Panic. Australian author Josephine Rowe shares her approach to crafting a slim but clever book, Little World, which is about three people, seemingly disconnected over time and geography that's drawn together through a connection to the body of an almost-saint.

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