Review by New York Times Review
the Australian writer Ashley Hay's second novel, "The Railwayman's Wife," was a contender for her country's premier literary prize, the Miles Franklin award. Which may explain why her exquisite first novel, "The Body in the Clouds," is finally being published in the United States. At its center are three men, seen in three different eras of the history of Sydney, whose lives are joined and changed by witnessing the same miracle: a man falling from the clouds into the sparkling harbor yet surviving, "marvelously alive." Dawes is an 18th-century astronomer, fresh off the first ships to settle Sydney, when he hears something "almost thunderous" hit the water. In 1930, Ted is a teenager, marveling at the partly constructed Sydney Harbour Bridge, when he sees the event he's dreamed: "Everything fluttered down to silence, Ted felt the dog's hackles stiffen under his hand, felt his own frame freeze to tautness. Someone was falling; someone was falling off the bridge." Dan is an Australian banker living a half-life in contemporary London when, in a nightmare, he imagines himself "falling suddenly, falling down through the air towards the water, a man's voice yelling from below, 'Get yourself straight, get yourself straight, lad.' " What if, Hay wonders, "something singular, unexpected, happened in some particularly malleable place, maybe it couldn't help but leave a trace - or alert you to its coming." This magic realist device forms the core of a rich, meditative novel that explores the connectivity of people living in the same geographical space across the distance of time. Through a series of satisfying, recurrent metaphors - repetitions of images, phrases, objects and dreams - Hay weaves her characters' stories closer, offering an allegory for the commonality of human experience. Her deft touch means that these connections are never forced; rather, they give the book the feel of memory, of a half-waking dream. Foremost in these metaphors for interconnectivity is the bridge itself: a sketched possibility for Dawes, an exhilarating construction job for Ted and a beautiful structure dominating Sydney's skyline and Dan's homesick dreams. The bridge is, in essence, a major character - as it is for any "Sydneysider" - and Hay celebrates the city's grand connective tissue, the sense of continuity through history the bridge represents. Crucially, it prompts Hay's meditations on narrative perspective, on witnessing time and space in different ways. Dramatized in the man's fall through the centuries - and more broadly through her characters' shared interest in comets, flight and stars - the conceit of viewing from above is used to represent the authorial omniscience that lets her look down through time and find the uniting essence of a place. That artistic intention is spoken aloud toward the end of the novel: "I was trying to work out how we must really look, smeared across time and space .... What traces we must leave"; "You're looking for overlaps, coincidences, aren't you, love? Bits of time between now and then that are the same?... Just keep going down through the layers and you'll find intersections." Hay finds those intersections in her engagement with intricate metaphors, aligned so neatly through three narratives that they combine to give the novel shape and structure, to generate resonant climaxes as each character finds a sense of connection, self and home in the patch of land around the bridge. These grander literary concepts are conveyed in Hay's elegant prose, which draws warm and textured portraits as it celebrates the web of human stories woven around this harbor - from the first aboriginal inhabitants through the early British settlers and on into the tumult of modern urban life. Within that sprawl, Hay discovers beauty. JAMES MCNAMARA reviews for The Washington Post, The Spectator, The Australian Book Review and other publications.
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [September 10, 2017]
Review by Booklist Review
At first glance, William, Ted, and Dan couldn't be much more different from one another. William Dawes is a British astronomer, sent to Australia in the 1700s to survey a new continent full of mystery, danger, and discovery. Ted Parker is a hearty young bridge worker, overjoyed to have reliable work in the lean times of the 1930s. Dan Kopak is an expatriate banker, hoping that a trip back to his hometown will relieve some of his modern-day wanderlust. The men's stories wend and wind around the uncharted wilderness and bustling modern metropolis of Sydney, dipping into tragedies and soaring above dreams, connecting each of them to something bigger than themselves. Author Hay returns with her second novel after the runaway success of The Railwayman's Wife (2016), her talent in blending historical detail with thought-provoking fiction on full display. Fans of Alex Rosenberg's historical fiction and Anthony Doerr's All the Light We Cannot See (2014) will enjoy Hay's intertwined stories, driving pace, poetic prose, and buoyant message. Exploring unbreakable connections across time and space, this is a sweeping, introspective, and transformative novel.--Turza, Stephanie Copyright 2017 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review
The themes of discovery, dreams, and destiny are represented in three story lines in this sophomore effort from Hay (after The Railwayman's Wife). An astronomer in the 1700s, a bridge worker in the 1930s, and a drifter traveling from England back to Australia all witnessed a man falling from the sky and surviving. Each person is awestruck by progress and exploration, by humanity's steady striving to reach new heights. This prominent motif is symbolized as the characters, all of whom do a lot of internal contemplation, ascend Ferris wheels, bridges, and planes. Hay's writing is profusely poetical and lavishly descriptive, and her pace floats along leisurely. Verdict Stylistically similar to Annie Dillard and Marilynne Robinson, Hay weaves three gossamer plot threads into a delicately airy, translucent whole in which the ideas outweigh story and character development. All the better for transcending the human state and turning a gaze up toward the clouds.-Sonia Reppe, Stickney-Forest View P.L., IL © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
In this intriguing second novel, three men from different centuries spend portions of their lives near a piece of land overlooking Sydney Harbor.William Dawes, an English astronomer in the 1780s, sails to Australia to document the stars and study the new species of flora and fauna. Ted Parker, a bridge worker in the 1930s, witnesses the miraculous rescue of a man who falls off a bridge into Sydney Harbor. In the present day, banker Dan Kopek flies from London back to his childhood home in Sydney as the man he calls Gramps nears death. Despite living in different times, there is an indefinable, curious connection among the three men. There are rich characters and relationships in each man's story; there are experiences of love and loss, of desires fulfilled...or not. Throughout, there's a slippery feeling that time and place are not fixed in linear fashion but rather stacked from the top downfuture on top of present on top of pastand the men can see down to the past and up to the future through tiny gaps in the clouds. William, Ted, and Dan are left to wonder at the sense that they are just missing something out of the corners of their eyes. Hay (The Railwayman's Wife, 2016, etc.) meanders a bit, pulling readers along with the promise that there will be a connection made. And there is. This skillfully written tale weaves back and forth between characters, revealing a hint of the connection of humanity through the ages. A finely woven tapestry of poetic language and subtle symbols, intertwined dreams, hopes, and visions, and a sense of seeing through cracksperhaps to an eternity where time is no more and all is known. Thought-provoking. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.