Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Joyful

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Joyful is a remarkable, razor-sharp comedy of grief from one of Australia's most dynamic writers.

Leon Joyce's years with Tess Wachowicz began with an Emanuel Ungaro taffeta ballgown, part of his collection of women's attire kept in three wardrobes at the South Yarra house. The collection took in Givenchy, Jacques Fath, Schiaparelli, Madae Gres, Helmut Lang, Claire McCardell, Mainbocher, Miyake, Yves Saint Laurent, Chanel, Dior, Travis Banton, Pucci and Antony Price.

Leon is a man unburdened by sexual desire. Nonetheless he adores his wife - only partly for the way she wears his exquisite collection of haute couture - and when she becomes ill and dies he is completely shattered.

Then he discovers her correspondence with an unknown lover, and his suffering veers towards madness.

Leon hunkers down at his neglected country property, Joyful, with the entire local supply of scotch whisky and a bizarre plan to retrieve (posthumously) Tess's devotion.

In this extraordinary comedy of grief, Robert Hillman evokes his characters, from the merely unconventional to the frankly deranged, with kindness, grace and wit. Joyful is a gift that will leave the reader deeply moved and filled with delight.

Robert Hillman has written a number of books including his 2004 memoir The Boy in the Green Suit, which won the National Biography Award, and bestselling novel The Bookshop of the Broken Hearted. He died in 2024.

'Hillman allows both men the grace of redemption and the prospect of a better kind of happiness, complete with its scars. Joyful is exactly as it says, a great joy of a book. Robert Hillman is not making fun of grief but rather of his characters' determination to wallow in their sorrow. It is a constant balancing act, skillfully enforced by Hillman and it makes reading Joyful an act of absolute pleasure.' Hoopla

'A detailed work that portrays an entire, sealed world of complex and ultimately connected storylines. The cultural setting is realised in a wonderfully rich Victorian style. Extended studies of social manners, quotes from journals and letters, and the aligning of characters with their passions for books, poetry and music, clothing, all produce a social world that is not only vivid but also ripe for commentary and debate.' Australian Book Review

'A deft and original portrayal of grief, longing and forgiveness.' Gideon Haigh

'A story about redemption and negotiating a place of peace inside despair.' Saturday Paper

'Hillman has a carefully calibrated sense of the line between mourning and madness, and he plays it to the hilt... Hillman's prose is a pleasure to read, elegantly alert to the paradox of strong feeling, full of poetry yet never entirely convinced by the absurd rhetorical gestures favoured by ruined men.' Weekend Australian

'This calamitous work, brassy with the vigour of life in a specifically Australian, specifically contemporary way, singles Hillman out from the crowd. There is nothing around quite like it; no genre, no homage to acknowledge. Leon, in his journey towards acceptance of the duality of one life, is a memorable, even dear character, and I would have been happy to have read this glittering, noisy work for Leon alone. And for Susie...and for the happy ending.' Sydney Morning Herald

'Slightly crazed, this unconventional story is essentially two similar struggles, at once both funny and sad. They finally merge and find resolution.' Otago Daily Times

'Ravishing, compelling prose...It's a strangely funny, compelling, and sad novel, the beauty of which is found in...

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Books+Publishing

      February 6, 2014
      At the beginning of Joyful, Tess, wife of the asexual Leon and lover of many men, dies. The reader then learns of their courtship, where Leon dresses Tess in glamorous clothes and falls in love with her (arguably, as an object). After Tess dies, Leon struggles to know his wife, believing she didn’t understand her own redemptive beauty and that she squandered it by living ‘her life through her vulva’. The reader thinks this will be a novel about this complicated character, Tess. Instead, another character is introduced: a Kurdish-Australian academic driven mad by the suicide of his daughter. His wife Daanya remains patient and faithful, despite the fact that he threatens to kill her. The reader also (in one of many irrelevant excesses in the narrative) becomes intimate with Daanya’s father’s view of her, including that she has become ‘plainer’ after having children. Women in this book are subhuman, existing as symbols, or to infuriate men with their desires. They unrealistically return, care and forgive. Along with this frustrating reductiveness, the formal prose and archaic dialogue (‘oh my dear fellow’) distances us from the mad, intellectual, ‘tasteful’ men, turning their potential ferocity into flatness. This is an uncharacteristically unengaging novel from a respected author.

      Angela Meyer is a writer, reviewer and editor of The Great Unknown (Spineless Wonders)

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

subjects

Languages

  • English

Loading