When Geraldine Brooks writes about Tim Winton, you can hear the axes grind
- Written by Donna Mazza, Associate professor, Edith Cowan University
The earthiness of Tim Winton’s homegrown language and storytelling has its share of critics, but also plenty of fans – enough to sustain 40 years or so of professional writing. His works are a feast of strange words and characters. There is a lot to admire, and a few butterfly wings to pick off if you like that kind of thing.
Winton wrote about axes in one of his early short stories: My Father’s Axe[1], from the 1985 collection Scission[2]. The axe is symbolic of the relationship between the young protagonist, who wields the axe, and his absent father:
Short, winter afternoons I spent up the back splitting pine for kindling, long, fragrant spines with neat grain, and I opened up the heads of mill-ends and sawn blocks of sheoak my father brought home: Sometimes in the trance of movement and exertion I imagined the blocks of wood as teachers’ heads. It was pleasurable work when the wood was dry and the grain good and when I kept the old Kelly axe sharp.
Frustration is mixed with sadness in a sublime emotional soup and captured in the ordinary – it’s classic Winton.
Review: Geraldine Brooks on Tim Winton (Black Inc.)