Helen prepares her spare room for her friend Nicola, who is flying down from Sydney for a visit. But this is no ordinary visit - Nicola has advanced cancer. She is coming to Melbourne to receive treatment. A story of compassion and rage as two women - one sceptical, one stubbornly serene - negotiate their way through Nicola's gruelling treatments.
Helen prepares her spare room for her friend Nicola, who is flying down from Sydney for a three-week visit. But this is no ordinary visit-Nicola has advanced cancer. She is coming to Melbourne to receive treatment she believes will cure her. From the moment Nicola steps off the plane, Helen becomes her nurse, her protector, her guardian angel and her stony judge.The Spare Room tells a story of compassion and rage as the two women-one sceptical, one stubbornly serene-negotiate their way through Nicola's gruelling treatments. Garner's dialogue is pitch perfect, her sense of pacing flawless as this novel draws to its terrible and transcendent finale.
Helen Garner was born in Geelong in 1942, and has been writing and publishing since her first book, Monkey Grip, came out in 1977.
'Garner's gradual awakening to her unadmitted anger is what gives her best book, her novel The Spare Room, much of its shattering power…The novel closes: "It was the end of my watch, and I handed her over." Helen has done as much as she can do. It is a typical Garner sentence, a writing lesson (all novels should end as completely) and a life lesson: spare, deserved, and complexly truthful, both a confession of failure and a small song of success.' -- James Wood * New Yorker *
Winner of Victorian Premier's Literary Award for Fiction (Australia).
Winner of Queensland Premier's Award for Fiction (Australia).
Winner of Barbara Jefferis Award (Australia).
Short-listed for Commonwealth Writers' Prize.
Short-listed for Australian Literary Society Gold Medal (Australia).
Short-listed for Colin Roderick Award (Australia).
Short-listed for WA Premier's Awards (Australia).
Short-listed for NSW Premier's Literary Award for Fiction (Australia).
'Garner's gradual awakening to her unadmitted anger is what gives her best book, her novel The Spare Room , much of its shattering power...The novel closes: "It was the end of my watch, and I handed her over." Helen has done as much as she can do. It is a typical Garner sentence, a writing lesson (all novels should end as completely) and a life lesson: spare, deserved, and complexly truthful, both a confession of failure and a small song of success.'