Of eels and everyday life

If you’re looking for some holiday reading, here’s an intriguing description of Greg Day’s The Patron Saint of Eels:
The narrator, Noel, and the rest of the rural town of Mangowak, wake one morning after heavy rain to find the ditches around the roads of the town full of eels that had been caught up in the overflow of the nearby lake and swamp. The plight of the displaced eels is resolved by Fra Ionio, a 300 year old monk, the Patron Saint of Eels. Ionio calms the eels down so they can return to their habitat at the bottom of the lake.The eels and Ionio capture the dynamic of forced displacement mirroring the displacement of the ‘old’ town by ’seachange’ urban-rural migrants and tourists, and the uncanny experience of the ageing process as one is displaced from the life of one’s younger self. Day’s antidote to this uncanny sensation of being displaced as the world and one’s self changes is to recognise the magic of the world. Not the extraordinary magic of the supernatural, but the extraordinary produced in the ordinary, the magic of the everyday and the overlooked dimension of the familiar world.
More at event mechanics.
- Anne