Staff Review of: One Another

One Another
by Gail Jones

Share
Ultimately it is a book about alienation and how a sense of belonging can come from afar: someone else’s past, or book

One Another follows Helen, a PhD student from Tasmania, who is writing on the life of Joseph Conrad while coming to terms with a turbulent relationship with her boyfriend, Justin. A story within a story, the novel moves gracefully between Jones’ incredibly well-researched story of Conrad as he writes Heart of Darkness, and Helen’s life at Cambridge University in the 90s. What connects the two central characters is an obsession with writing the perfect story, and being away from home. Conrad’s roaming life at sea took him all over the globe, and under Helen’s eye we access intimate biographical detail of Conrad’s life – his sea voyages to Australia, his time in the Congo, his suicide attempt in France.

Written with beautiful, melodic language, Jones shifts between Helen’s story and her fixation with Conrad with a masterful hand. Ultimately it is a book about alienation and how a sense of belonging can come from afar: someone else’s past, or books. Great for fans of Richard Flanagan’s Question 7 and anyone who finds satisfaction from detailed biographies on literary figures.