The atomic bomb and a near-death experience shadow Richard Flanagan's autobiographical Question 7
- Written by Dan Dixon, Adjunct Lecturer, University of Sydney
The most astonishing and accomplished sequence in Richard Flanagan’s Question 7[1] arrives near the book’s end, as he describes the near-death experience that inspired his first novel, Death of a River Guide[2], published in 1994.
It reads as if Flanagan has spent the book winding up, gathering the strength to find an angle of entry into that formative trauma. With propulsive confidence, he details the hours spent trapped under a kayak, being battered and pressed by the Franklin River’s tumultuous waters, brushing up against death, perhaps briefly succumbing, before being rescued and returned, transformed, to the world of the living.
The irony, however, of this sequence’s brilliance, is that it clarifies how certain aspects of the book that precedes it are oddly hesitant.
Review: Question 7 – Richard Flanagan (Knopf)