Anne Enright’s bold new novel The Wren, The Wren is the work of a writer at the height of her power
- Written by Georgia Phillips, Lecturer, Creative Writing, University of Adelaide
In her essay Mr Bennett and Mrs Brown[1], published in 1924, Virginia Woolf famously proposed that the novel’s primary function is the expression of character. She presented the maxim: “it is only if the characters are real that the novel has any chance of surviving.”
But in her discussion of what constitutes “real character”, she went on to ask a strikingly contemporary question: “what is reality? And who are the judges of reality?”
Review: The Wren, The Wren – Anne Enright (Jonathan Cape)
The question of how different characters judge, navigate and offset one another’s shared reality is at the centre of Anne Enright’s eighth novel, The Wren, The Wren[2]. This technically experimental work trails a relationship between a young and spirited 20-something Trinity College student named Nell and her soberingly pragmatic mother Carmel.
Both women’s sense of self and perception of reality are irrevocably altered by two key events that ripple through the novel.
The first is Nell’s desperate bid for independence. In the opening pages, she has moved to a “little bubble of sorrow” in the Dublin suburb of Ballybough. This dreaded but necessary ascension to adulthood breaks her mother’s heart and her own.
Carmel’s sudden and reluctant empty-nester freedom prompts her to nostalgically revisit a series of painful memories from early adolescence and her years of single motherhood.
As with Enright’s earlier novels and her nonfiction work Making Babies: Stumbling into Motherhood[3] (2004), The Wren, The Wren interrogates the politics of care and motherhood. It also offers an incisive meditation on the nature of filial relationships. And like her Man Booker Prize winner The Gathering[4] (2007), it offers little consolation.