The Luminaries - Reading Group Guide
The Luminaries - Reading Group Guide
The Luminaries - Reading Group Guide
Group
Guide
QUESTIONS
AND
TOPICS
FOR
DISCUSSION
1. Do
you
believe
in
astrology?
Do
you
attribute
any
part
of
your
personality
to
your
star
sign?
To
what
extent
do
you
think
the
characters
in
The
Luminaries
are
bound
to
their
astrological
signs?
2. In
a
similar
vein,
Eleanor
Catton
has
given
each
of
the
twelve
men
the
personality
stereotypical
to
an
astrological
sign.
Does
this
mean
all
their
actions
are
pre-determined?
And
when
taking
into
account
the
fact
that
this
is
a
story
filled
with
coincidences,
unpredictabilities,
and
mistaken
assumptions,
what
do
you
think
Catton
is
saying
about
fate
vs.
coincidence?
Does
she
give
more
clout
to
one
concept
than
to
the
other?
3. Following
the
Zodiac
as
a
guiding
structure,
The
Luminaries
is
a
stunning
feat
of
construction.
Some
have
argued
that,
in
novels
especially,
high
structural
complexity
can
come
at
the
expense
of
plot.
In
what
ways
does
The
Luminaries
defy
this
theory?
4. Throughout
the
book,
people
are
either
hurting
Anna
or
helping
her.
What
is
it
about
her
that
makes
her
a
litmus
test
for
other
characters
morality?
5. This
book
is
filled
with
stories
within
stories.
The
reader
is
often
told
multiple
versions
of
events.
For
example,
at
the
beginning
of
the
book,
do
the
twelve
men
at
the
secret
meeting
tell
Walter
Moody
the
whole
truth?
If
not,
what
are
their
reasons
for
being
less
than
truthful?
Are
there
other
times
when
you
found
yourself
doubting
the
validity
of
a
characters
assertions?
6. Do
you
feel
that
the
narrator
was
completely
trustworthy?
Like
her
Victorian
predecessors,
Catton
doesnt
hesitate
to
intersperse
the
narrative
with
moral
judgments
of
her
charactersfrequently,
her
characters
judge
one
another.
Sometimes,
the
narrator
breaks
the
fourth
wall
by
addressing
the
audience
directly.
Do
these
techniques
make
the
narrator
more
reliable
than
one
who
feigns
neutrality?
Is
there
ever
such
thing
as
a
narrator
who
is
completely
objective?
7. Some
have
interpreted
The
Luminaries
as
a
philosophical
meditation
on
time,
pointing
to
the
conflation
of
present
and
past
throughout
the
story.
Do
you
agree?
What
do
you
think
The
Luminaries
is
saying
about
time?
8. The
Luminaries
is
set
in
a
New
Zealand
that
is
rapidly
changing
as
a
result
of
the
gold
rush.
Banking
has
become
all-important,
and
the
outside
world
is
exerting
its
growing
influence,
resulting
in
the
confluence
of
the
savage
and
civil,
the
old
world
and
the
new.
Do
any
of
the
concerns
of
the
people
in
this
place
and
time
still
resonate
today?
Are
there
ways
in
which
this
story
could
be
universal?
9. Eleanor
Catton
was
born
in
Canada,
lives
in
New
Zealand,
studied
in
the
United
States,
and
travels
regularly.
How
do
you
think
that
her
experiences
as
an
international
citizen
have
shaped
her
prose?
Are
there
certain
limitations
or
freedoms
that
Cattons
nationality
have
on
her
legacy
as
a
writer?
10. Some
media
outlets
have
asserted
that
The
Luminaries
is
dominated
by
male
characters
and
brings
to
life
a
male-dominated
world
with
this
story.
Do
you
agree?
If
Catton
were
a
man,
do
you
think
this
issue
would
have
surfaced?
Should
female
writers
have
to
take
their
own
gender
into
account
when
writing?
A
CONVERSATION
WITH
ELEANOR
CATTON
Since
the
Booker
Prize
announcement,
youve
given
hundreds
of
interviews.
What,
if
anything,
are
you
getting
exhausted
of
talking
about?
My
age,
and
the
books
length.
One
interviewer
asked
me
if
becoming
the
youngest
winner
of
the
Booker
Prize
had
been
intentional.
I
looked
at
her
funny,
and
she
rushed
on
to
amend
her
question:
well,
had
writing
the
longest
book
ever
to
win
the
prize
been
intentional?
Im
not
sure
how
to
answer
questions
like
that,
and
there
have
been
a
lot
of
them.
They
seem
to
confuse
writing
with
headline-making.
I
didnt
set
out
to
break
a
record.
That
is
so
uncomfortable.
As
if
your
writing
practice
is
just
a
scheme
to
make
yourself
attractively
blurbable.
I
know
Im
not
the
only
one
to
have
been
disheartened
by
some
critics
focus
on
your
youth,
your
looks,
and
your
genderas
if
thats
the
most
interesting
thing
about
the
novelinstead
of
on
the
books
experimental
and
intellectual
achievements.
I
guess
thats
the
way
of
sound-bite
media.
I
remember
you
saying
once
that
there
was
more
of
you
in
The
Luminaries
than
in
your
first
novel
The
Rehearsal.
What
did
you
mean?
I
pushed
myself
much
more
in
writing
The
Luminaries.
The
risks
were
greater,
and
risk
is
always
revealing:
I
had
to
confront
my
own
cowardices,
and
the
limits
of
my
ability,
before
I
could
learn
how
to
be
brave.
In
a
way
my
presence
in
the
novelas
I
feel
itis
tied
up
with
the
books
omniscient
third-person
narration,
and
with
the
fact
that
its
peopled
so
overwhelmingly
with
men:
because
I
couldnt
be
anywhere,
I
had
to
be
everywhere,
if
that
makes
sense.
On
the
surface,
it
might
seem
as
though
I
have
more
in
common
with
the
characters
of
The
Rehearsal,
but
as
a
thinking,
feeling
person
I
feel
much
more
revealed
in
The
Luminaries:
the
book
believes
what
I
believe,
and
wants
what
I
want,
and
mistakes
what
I
mistake,
and
loves
what
I
love.
I
want
to
ask
it:
what
do
you
love?
I
love
unguarded
expressions
of
love:
enthusiasm,
passion,
worship.
Emery
Staines,
who
is
first
the
Sun
and
later
the
Moon
of
The
Luminaries,
is
for
me
the
books
loving
heart.
Hes
terribly
nave.
But
his
naivety
is
a
kind
hopeful
projection,
a
wilful
delight
in
the
curious
and
the
good.
I
love
people
like
him:
people
who
would
prefer
to
be
enchanted
and
wrong
than
to
be
cynical
and
correct.
Ive
always
favoured
Buzz
Lightyear
above
Woody
for
that
reason.
Buzz
is
quixotic.
He
wants
to
believe.
Woodys
tragedy
is
rejection;
but
Buzzs
tragedy
is
the
loss
of
the
illusion
that
sustained
him.
In
a
way
The
Luminaries
asks
its
reader
to
be
quixotic.
Astrology,
like
all
meaning-making
systems,
can
be
wonderfully
sustaining.
But
in
order
to
countenance
it,
you
have
to
let
yourself
be
a
little
bit
nave.
Who
might
make
up
your
dream
cast
of
actors
for
the
film
version
of
the
book?
I
imagine
Christina
Hendricks
(Joan
from
Mad
Men)
as
the
cunning
fortune-telling
seductress
Lydia
Wells,
and
I
reckon
Timothy
Spall
would
do
a
splendid
Mannering.
Those
are
excellent
choices.
My
top
picks
are
James
McAvoy
for
Moody,
Dominic
West
for
Carver,
Brendan
Gleeson
for
Mannering,
Richard
E.
Grant
for
Pritchard,
Vincent
Cassel
for
Gascoigne,
Mark
Williams
for
Balfour.
These
names
are
coming
quickly
to
me
because
I
have
a
deeply
tragic
folder
on
my
desktop
containing
downloaded
images
of
all
the
actors
Id
like
to
see
in
a
dream-cast
TV
version.
Occasionally
when
I
was
stuck
writing
I
would
click
through
the
photos
really
quickly,
and
pretend
it
was
a
film.
I
am
curious
about
how
completely
the
psychology
of
the
characters
is
informed
by
astrological
theory.
Is
the
banker
Charlie
Frosts
total
subjectivityhis
inability
to
put
himself
in
others
shoes,
or
to
be
attentive
to
others
behavioura
particularly
Taurean
quality,
for
example?
Or
is
that
just
Charlie?
When
I
read
the
passage
on
Harald
Nilssens
proclamation
of
the
health
benefits
of
his
regular
lunch
(dark
gravy,
pastry,
and
ale),
and
the
description
of
how
he
makes
a
habit
of
recommendation
for
the
profit
of
other,
less
visionary
men,
I
remembered
that
when
some
friends
visited
from
America,
you
insisted
they
eat
hokey-pokey
ice
cream
and
chocolate
fish
(or
whateverthe
New
Zealand
favourites!).
Also
Nilssens
love
of
preposterous,
hypothetical
argument;
I
thought,
thats
Ellie.
Am
I
reading
too
much
into
the
Libra-Libra
connection?
Astrology
is
gendered:
the
same
principle
will
manifest
quite
differently
in
a
male
personality
and
a
female
personality,
simply
because
men
and
women
get
treated
very
differently
in
our
culture,
with
some
personality
traits
being
rewarded,
and
others
discouraged,
depending
on
the
gender
of
the
person
in
question.
There
is
something
of
me
in
Nilssen,
but
only
in
a
refracted
kind
of
way:
as
a
male
Libra,
he
shares
a
gender
with
his
sign
(Libra
is
an
air
sign,
which
is
masculine)
and
is
therefore
understood
to
embody
the
Libran
principle.
As
a
female
Libraa
woman
born
under
a
masculine
signI
enact
that
same
principle.
A
male
Taurus
might
well
recognise
himself
in
Frostsubjectivity
is
key
to
the
Taurean
sensibility,
enacted
in
men,
embodied
in
women
but
of
course
people
only
recognise
themselves
when
they
are
willing
to
do
so.
I
love
the
difference
between
embodiment
and
enactment:
it
seems
to
share
something
with
Jungs
concepts
of
introversion
and
extraversion,
in
that
it
suggests
a
difference
of
direction,
of
movement.
Virginia
Woolf
and
James
Joyce
are
a
good
case
study,
as
they
were
both
Aquariansshe
the
enactment,
he
the
embodiment,
of
the
same
essential
principle.
I
found
out
the
other
day
that
I
share
a
birthday
with
F.
Scott
Fitzgerald,
and
I
rather
like
the
idea
that
I
might
enact
in
the
world
what
he
embodied
in
his
person.
But
I
also
found
out
that
David
Cameron
shares
a
birthday
with
PJ
Harvey,
so
go
figure.
Speaking
of
gendered
differences
in
reaction
and
actionyouve
talked
of
a
certain
bullying
reception
to
your
book
here
in
New
Zealand
by
a
certain
set
of
older
male
critics.
The
omniscient
narrator,
the
idea
that
you
had
to
be
everywhere,
seems
to
have
affronted
some
male
readers,
as
has
the
length
of
the
book.
Have
you
experienced
this
reaction
in
the
UK,
too,
or
in
Canada?
Has
it
been
a
peculiarly
New
Zealand
response,
perhaps
because
of
the
necessarily
small
pool
of
literary
competition
here?
This
is
a
point
that
has
been
perhaps
overstated.
Theres
been
a
lot
written
about
what
I
said,
and
in
fact
the
way
I
think
and
feel
about
the
reviewing
culture
we
have
in
New
Zealand
has
changed
a
lot
through
reading
the
responses
and
objections
of
others.
Initially
I
used
the
word
bullying
only
to
remark
that,
as
we
all
learn
at
school,
more
often
than
not
someones
objections
are
more
to
do
with
their
own
shortcomings
or
failures
than
with
yours,
and
thats
something
that
you
have
to
remember
when
youre
seeing
your
artistic
efforts
devalued
or
dismissed
in
print.
I
dont
feel
bullied
when
I
receive
a
negative
review,
but
I
do
think
that
some
of
the
early
reviewers
refused
to
engage
with
the
book
on
its
own
terms,
and
that
refusal
seemed
to
me
to
have
a
lot
to
do
with
my
gender
and
my
age.
To
even
things
out,
I
called
attention
to
the
gender
and
age
of
those
reviewers,
which
at
the
time
seemed
only
fair.
I
feel
that
its
very
important
to
say
that
sexism
is
a
hegemonic
problem,
written
in
to
all
kinds
of
cultural
attitudes
that
are
held
by
men
and
women
alike.
As
a
culture
we
are
much
more
comfortable
with
the
idea
of
the
male
thinker
than
the
female
thinker,
simply
because
there
are
so
many
more
examples,
throughout
history,
of
male
thinkers;
as
an
image
and
as
an
idea,
the
male
thinker
is
familiar
to
us,
and
acts
in
most
cases
as
a
default.
Consequently
female
thinkers
are
often
unacknowledged
and
discouraged,
sometimes
tacitly,
sometimes
explicitly,
sometimes
by
men,
and
sometimes
by
women.
I
am
lucky,
following
the
Man
Booker
announcement,
that
my
work
is
now
being
read
very
seriously
indeed;
but
that
is
a
privilege
conferred
for
the
most
part
by
the
status
of
the
prize,
and
I
know
that
I
am
the
exception
rather
than
the
rule.
Id
like
to
see
a
paradigm
shift,
and
Im
confident
that
one
is
on
the
way,
but
the
first
thing
that
needs
to
happen
is
a
collective
acknowledgement
that
reviewing
culture
is
genderedthat
everything
is
genderedand
that
until
each
of
us
makes
a
conscious
effort
to
address
inequality,
we
will
each
remain
a
part
of
the
problem,
rather
than
a
part
of
the
solution.
Protesting
the
fact
of
inequality
is
like
protesting
global
warming
or
evolution:
its
a
conservative
blindness,
born
out
of
cowardice
and
hostility.
Its
also
important
for
me
to
say
that
all
of
the
early
endorsements
for
The
Luminaries
were
from
men;
a
great
many
of
my
most
considered
reviews
have
been
from
men;
and
I
relied
upon
the
intelligence,
sensitivity,
and
insight
of
a
great
many
men
in
writing
the
book.
I
have
said
all
this
in
interviews,
actually,
but
in
nearly
every
case,
its
been
cut.
People
forget
sometimes
that
an
interview
is
a
selective
fragment
of
a
conversation,
not
a
transcript.
What
do
you
reckon
the
perception
of
the
world-at-large
is
to
New
Zealand
literature?
Is
there
a
common
reaction
people
have
when
they
learn
that
New
Zealand
is
your
home?
People
generally
seem
surprised
that
I
live
there,
as
though
New
Zealand
is
a
place
to
be
from
rather
than
a
place
to
be.
They
ask
if
Im
moving
to
New
York
or
London
soon.
But
theres
rarely
a
sense
of
connecting
my
work
to
the
work
of
other
New
Zealand
writers,
or
placing
me
in
the
context
of
a
tradition.
Im
not
sure
if
there
is
a
very
real
sense,
overseas,
of
what
New
Zealand
literature
comprises.
The
setting
of
The
Luminaries
is
vividly
and
historically
New
Zealand.
Are
there
other
ways
you
feel
the
novel
is
connected
to
New
Zealand
writing
(whatever
that
might
be)?
One
of
the
curious
things
about
the
West
Coast
gold
rush
was
how
few
of
the
prospectors
stayed
on:
a
strike
was
known
as
a
homeward-bounder
because
it
allowed
the
digger
in
question
to
quit
prospecting
and
return
home.
I
think
that
there
still
is
a
sense,
in
New
Zealand
culture,
that
if
there
is
a
fortune
to
be
made,
its
a
fortune
best
spent
elsewherethat
a
life
in
London
or
New
York
is
somehow
more
of
a
life,
somehow
more
alive
and
more
interesting,
than
a
life
in
Wellington
or
Christchurch.
Te
Rau
Tauwhare
and
Charlie
Frost
are
the
two
characters
in
the
novel
who
were
born
in
New
Zealand,
and
as
Aries
and
Taurus,
respectively,
they
represent
the
objective
and
the
subjective,
the
Adam
and
Eve
of
the
zodiacs
twelve-part
story.
I
like
to
think
of
New
Zealands
identity
being
a
kind
of
fusion
of
the
two
of
them:
proud,
like
Tauwhare,
but
also
embarrassed,
like
Frost.
I
havent
really
answered
your
question,
I
know:
I
think
its
because
I
find
it
much
easier
to
spot
attitudes
than
traditions
in
New
Zealand
literature.
Perhaps
that
might
be
a
kind
of
tradition
in
itself:
emotional
affiliations
having
shaped
our
literature
more
than,
say,
formal
affiliations.
Youve
mentioned
The
Luminaries
was
a
response
to
conceptual
works
that
wrung
all
fun
out
(like
Italo
Calvinos
The
Castle
of
Crossed
Destinies
which
I
admit
I
havent
read).
As
well
as
being
packed
with
intrigue
and
psychology
and
philosophy,
The
Luminaries
is
totally
funny.
The
whole
way
through
I
found
myself
chortling
out
loud.
Is
there
any
tradition,
international
or
otherwise,
that
does
big
cerebral
philosophising
with
a
grin,
and
which
you
feel
you
might
belong
to?
Absolutely:
childrens
literature.
Books
for
children
are
always
ethically
and
morally
concerned,
theyre
nearly
always
extremely
funny,
and
theyre
always,
always
mysteries.
Systematised
magic,
in
childrens
literature,
is
comparable
to
the
perimeters
of
the
philosophical
thought
experimentIm
thinking
of
Lois
Lowrys
The
Giver,
Gillian
Rubensteins
GalaxArena,
Diana
Wynne
Joness
Howls
Moving
Castle,
Patrick
Nesss
A
Monster
Callsbut
a
book
for
children
is
hopeless
if
it
isnt
fun.
I
cant
tell
you
how
many
times
I
collapsed
laughing
while
reading
the
Harry
Potter
novels,
but
I
also
cant
tell
you
how
long
Ive
spent
meditating
on
the
nature
of
love,
and
of
sacrifice,
and
of
courage,
as
explored
in
those
books.
One
commentator,
in
an
ironic
and
deprecating
article
where
he
encourages
the
reader
to
pity
you
for
winning
such
a
big
award
at
such
a
young
age,
quotes
Beckett:
failure
is
bracing
and
healthy
for
the
soul.
If
failure
is
healthy
and
useful
in
our
growth
as
human
beings,
what
functionhealthy
or
otherwisedo
you
think
fame
and
success
can
perform?
I
think
that
success
is
dangerous
because
it
can
make
a
person
feel
too
comfortable;
it
can
lull
them
into
thinking
that
they
have
achieved
mastery
and
dont
need
to
be
curious
any
more.
But
failure
can
also
do
that:
it
can
function
as
a
kind
of
inverse
achievement,
where
feel
youve
achieved
the
opposite
of
mastery,
and
you
give
up.
Right
now
the
successes
of
my
life
are
much
more
visible
than
the
failures;
but
thats
not
to
say
that
there
havent
been
failures,
that
there
arent
failures.
Its
really
important
to
me
to
remain
in
a
dialogic
state,
both
with
myself
and
with
the
world.
Im
not
interested
in
mastery;
Im
interested
in
curiosity
and
apprenticeship,
in
asking
questions
and
contemplating
mysteries
and
changing
my
mind.
For
me,
a
healthy
life
is
one
that
can
confront
diversity
with
warmth
and
flexibility.
I
dont
think
the
Booker
Prize
will
get
in
the
way
of
that
belief.
Kindness
is
a
core
value
for
any
artist,
but
most
especially
for
a
fiction
writer:
a
self-centred
person
cant
see
the
world
from
another
persons
point
of
view.
The
books
astrological
structuring
device
engineers
a
dialogue
between
fate
and
coincidence,
nature
and
nurture,
circumstance
and
luck.
From
the
perspective
of
astrology,
you
might
say
that
each
of
the
characters
decisions
is
pre-ordained;
their
movements
are
pre-determined
according
to
the
position
of
the
stars
at
the
time
of
their
birth.
The
plot
is
advanced
through
unlikely
layers
of
coincidence,
and
the
characters
are
intricately
interconnected
and
interdependent.
These
labyrinthine
relationships
are
set
against
a
rapidly
changing
gold-rush
town
in
a
volatile
era,
where
a
man
or
a
womans
fortune
could
utterly
transform
overnight.
To
me,
all
of
this
suggests
a
multiplication
of
lifes
possibilities,
rather
than
a
reduction
of
them.
Was
this
your
intention?
Do
you
believe
in
luck,
or
fate,
or
nature
over
nurture?
In
using
star
charts
to
generate
the
pattern
of
the
plot
I
was,
to
a
certain
extent,
pre-determining
the
storys
shapebut
the
idea
of
predestination
doesnt
really
make
sense
when
talking
about
the
creation
of
a
novel,
which
is
shaped
and
crafted
out
of
time,
and
with
a
purpose.
I
chose
each
star
chart
deliberately,
with
a
view
to
how
I
could
use
it,
and
I
relaxed
my
hold
wherever
I
needed
to.
I
painted
myself
into
a
corner
a
great
many
times,
and
was
often
stuck
for
weeks,
frustrated,
staring
at
the
pattern,
trying
to
figure
out
how
I
could
use
the
fact
that
Scorpio
(Pritchard)
is
ruled
by
Mars
(Carver),
or
that
Saturn
(Shepard)
shifted
into
Virgo
(Quee)
in
March
of
1866.
The
plot
involves
a
great
many
coincidences,
some
much
sillier
than
others.
But
can
you
have
a
plotted
novel
without
coincidence?
Im
not
sure
if
that
would
be
possible.
Stories
depend
on
connection.
I
see
luck,
and
fate,
and
nature
versus
nurture,
as
methods
of
interpretation;
for
me,
their
usefulness
is
dependent
upon
the
meaning
they
create.
I
am
suspicious
of
the
ways
in
which
all
three
concepts
have
been
co-
opted,
over
the
past
century,
by
the
fiscally
and
socially
conservative,
but
I
think
that
all
three
can
be
useful
at
times
when
a
person
is
reaching
out
for
meaning.
Sometimes
feeling
lucky,
or
fated,
or
natural,
is
hugely
meaningful,
and
hugely
necessary
because
of
that.
By
the
end
of
The
Luminaries
the
reader
discovers
that
Emery
Staines
luck
has
been
greatly
exaggerated,
as
has
Annas
lucklessness;
in
effect,
the
community
has
projected
onto
both
characters
the
interpretation
that
makes
the
most
sense
of
their
own
individual
values,
their
own
individual
desires.
I
think
most
instances
of
luck
are
like
that.
The
prize
is
a
huge
game-changerfor
you,
for
your
writing
career,
and
for
your
bank
account.
Do
you
feel
any
tensions
between
what
you
want
to
do
with
the
money,
and
what
you
feel
you
ought
to
do?
Are
there
any
debts
of
gratitude
you
feel
compelled
to
repay,
either
monetarily
or
psychically?
I
think
Ill
probably
do
the
sensible
thing
and
buy
my
first
homean
exciting
prospect
for
somebody
whose
hobby
is
moving
the
furniture
around
(to
the
exasperation
of
my
partner,
and
the
joy
of
my
cats).
The
debts
of
gratitude
that
I
accrued
along
the
way,
in
writing
The
Luminaries,
cant
really
be
repaid
with
money.
I
really
want
to
keep
teaching
at
MIT,
and
to
maintain
the
friendships
in
my
life
that
are
vital
to
me,
and
to
stay
connected
with
my
family.
That
does
sound
smart.
I
am
interested
in
your
opinion
about
the
myth
of
the
tortured
artist,
and
its
usefulness
for
a
society
badly
in
need
of
healthy
models
of
creativity.
Most
of
the
writers
I
know
are
struggling
to
make
important
art,
but
they
are
also
struggling,
equally
hard,
to
live
healthly,
connected,
value-creating
daily
lives.
Do
you
think
we
are
moving
past
praising
the
glamour
of
the
non-functioning
creative
genius?
I
hope
that
we
are.
I
find
the
idea
of
unsupported
genius
deeply
distasteful:
it
disrespects
mothers,
and
fathers,
and
teachers,
and
lovers,
and
all
the
accidents
and
opportunities
and
coincidences
that
conspire,
along
the
way,
to
help
create
and
launch
an
artistic
sensibility.
We
need
a
new
model:
one
that
doesnt
depend
on
outmoded
gender
norms,
destructive
values,
and
the
profoundly
ugly
idea
that
to
be
indebted
is
to
be
demeaned.
Kindness
is
a
core
value
for
any
artist,
but
most
especially
for
a
fiction
writer:
a
self-centred
person
cant
see
the
world
from
another
persons
point
of
view.
ELEANOR
CATTON
ON
NEW
ZEALAND,
THE
LAND
OF
THE
LONG
WHITE
CLOUD
There
is
a
playful
antagonism
between
the
inhabitants
of
New
Zealand's
two
islands,
North
and
South.
If
you're
a
North
Islander:
the
South
might
have
better
views,
but
the
North
is
superior
because
it
has
richer
culture.
If
you're
a
South
Islander:
the
North
might
have
richer
culture,
but
the
South
is
superior
because
it
has
better
views.
It's
a
quarrel
between
substance
and
form,
if
you
like,
a
question
of
emphasis
does
a
country's
nature
owe
most
to
its
history,
or
to
its
land?
In
both
senses
New
Zealand
is
curiously
compressed.
The
first
Polynesian
settlers
landed
less
than
1,000
years
ago,
the
first
Europeans
less
than
300.
Geographically,
too,
the
land
is
compact:
a
five-hour
drive
over
the
spine
of
the
Southern
Alps
will
take
you
through
a
dozen
entirely
different
landscapes
beach
river
valley
marshland
rainforest
gorge
foothill
highland
alps
plains
peninsula
beach
and
each
with
its
own
weather,
its
own
skies,
its
own
quality
of
light.
(It
is
a
strange
thing
how
swiftly
the
forecast
can
change
in
the
Pacific
dress
for
all
weather,
the
backcountry
guides
advise
you,
and
expect
four
seasons
in
a
single
day.)
The
South
is
the
more
visually
stunning,
but
the
North
is
the
more
populous
and
cultivated:
this
is
a
contrast
that
recalls
each
island's
proper
name.
The
North
Island
is
Te
Ika
A
Maui,
"the
fish
of
Maui"
(recounting
the
mythic
tale
of
New
Zealand's
creation)
where
the
South
is
Te
Wai
Pounamu,
"the
waters
of
greenstone"
(describing
the
glassy
stone,
prized
by
Maori,
that
is
found
in
the
swift
rivers
and
along
the
savage
misted
beaches
of
the
lonely
south).
New
Zealand
national
identity
lies
somewhere
between
these
emphases,
North
and
South:
as
a
bicultural
nation,
it
must
identify
both
as
"the
place
of
this
people"
and
as
"the
people
of
this
place".
In
Maori
the
country's
full
name,
Aotearoa,
is
a
lovely
kind
of
oxymoron:
it
translates
as
"the
land
of
the
long
white
cloud",
as
if
clouds
were
properties
of
the
earth,
or
served
in
some
strange
way
to
invoke
it.
I
grew
up
on
the
South
Island
of
New
Zealand,
in
a
city
chosen
and
beloved
by
my
parents
for
its
proximity
to
the
mountains
Christchurch
is
two
hours
distant
from
the
worn
saddle
of
Arthur's
Pass,
the
mountain
village
that
was
and
is
my
father's
spiritual
touchstone,
his
chapel
and
cathedral
in
the
wild.
For
many
years
while
I
was
growing
up
my
parents
did
not
own
a
car.
We
rode
around
town
on
two
tandem
bicycles
and
one
single
(a
source
of
considerable
embarrassment
to
me
at
the
time)
and
at
weekends
we
would
occasionally
rent
a
car
in
order
to
drive
into
the
alps,
and
go
hiking.
My
father
is
an
expatriate
American;
he
fell
in
love
with
New
Zealand
in
his
youth
and
never
went
home.
As
a
child
I
didn't
really
comprehend
my
father's
affection
for
the
land,
nor
for
the
steep-sided
alp
to
which
he
returns
as
to
an
altar:
Avalanche
Peak,
a
six-hour
ascent
above
the
cloud-filled
valley
of
the
pass.
My
sense
of
injustice
about
our
family's
"weirdness"
in
not
owning
a
car
was
amplified
by
the
fact
that
we
did
not
own
a
television
either
my
parents
were
unapologetic
about
this,
and
told
me
very
cheerfully
that
I
would
thank
them
for
it
when
I
was
older,
which
was
quite
true.
But
at
the
time
Dad's
refrain
"Nature
looks
more
beautiful
in
the
rain"
was
not
met
with
good
grace.
Nor
was
his
notion
that
a
view
was
something
gained
through
effort
scenery,
for
him,
was
something
that
ought
to
be
deserved.
When
we
reached
our
summit,
or
whatever
spot
was
deemed
by
my
father
to
be
of
adequately
punishing
distance
from
the
car
to
deserve
lunch,
Dad
would
invariably
find
he
had
forgotten
his
Swiss
army
knife
(looking
back,
I
begin
to
doubt
he
ever
had
one)
and
instead
would
cut
cheese
into
slices
with
the
edge
of
his
credit
card.
It
is
this
kind
of
detail
that
I
remember
the
credit
card,
waxy
and
oiled
along
its
edge
from
our
expeditions
into
the
hills.
I
can
recall
the
clean-smelling
interiors
of
each
rental
car,
always
a
different
model
and
a
slightly
different
shape;
the
empty
glove
box;
the
chipped
toes
of
my
boots;
and
how
my
hands
became
swollen
and
too
weak
to
make
a
fist
after
a
day
of
walking
uphill.
I
remember,
once,
the
rubber
seal
around
the
car
door
clipped
into
the
shape
of
a
postage
stamp
by
alpine
parrots
looking
for
something
to
steal.
But
I
don't
remember
the
views
not
as
memories.
In
fact
I
am
sure
that
I
never
experienced,
as
a
child,
any
kind
of
encounter
with
the
sublime,
that
catch
in
the
throat,
that
tightness
of
the
lungs,
that
sudden,
roaring
sense
of
one's
extreme
smallness
in
a
huge,
awful,
beautiful
world.
To
experience
sublime
natural
beauty
is
to
confront
the
total
inadequacy
of
language
to
describe
what
you
see.
Words
cannot
convey
the
scale
of
a
view
that
is
so
stunning
it
is
felt.
In
such
moments
natural
beauty
becomes
a
kind
of
devastation
it
is
pure
encounter,
too
compressed
in
time
and
space
to
be
properly
contained.
I
do
not
feel
the
sublime
when
I
look
at
a
city,
however
impressive
it
might
be
in
proportion
and
shadow,
for
the
reason
that
a
city
is
designed,
in
its
substance
it
has
been
formally
determined,
and
it
has
been
named
already
by
the
fact
of
its
creation.
Words
are
adequate.
I
have
never
been
moved
to
tears
by
a
skyline,
or
a
building,
or
a
painted
arch,
but
the
sudden
apparition
of
a
peak
from
behind
a
sheet
of
mist
is
enough,
now,
to
make
me
cry.
I
think
that
a
child
does
not
feel
the
sublime
because
a
child
need
not,
perhaps
cannot,
confront
the
limitations
of
his
or
her
language
language,
for
a
child,
is
already
miraculous,
supple,
generous
in
its
association,
tragic,
hilarious,
disproportionate
and
huge.
Looking
at
a
cloud-filled
valley
was
less
interesting
to
me
(or
at
least,
no
more
interesting
to
me)
than
looking
at
my
father
drag
his
thumb
along
the
magnetic
stripe
of
his
credit
card
to
wipe
it
clean.
When
I
was
14,
my
father
took
me
on
a
tandem
bicycle
trip
across
the
mountains.
He
had
already
taken
my
sister
and
then
my
brother,
in
his
turn,
and
as
the
youngest,
my
trip
came
last.
We
were
to
cross
the
Lewis
Pass,
touch
the
Tasman
Sea,
and
return
over
Arthur's
in
a
loop.
The
trip
would
take
four
days.
I
remember
with
clarity
the
preparations
for
the
journey
oiling
the
chain,
strapping
down
our
tent,
fitting
the
road
map
into
the
laminated
pocket
on
the
front
of
the
bike.
But
I
remember,
too,
how
hopeful
I
was
that
something
out
of
the
ordinary
would
happen;
that
we
would
discover
something,
or
have
to
endure
something,
out
of
which
might
come
a
story.
My
brother
had
described
to
me
an
event
from
his
own
trip
several
years
prior.
He
had
awoken
early
in
the
morning
and
witnessed
firsthand
the
birth
of
a
calf.
He
and
my
father
had
pitched
their
tent
in
the
stolen
corner
of
a
farmer's
lot,
and
so
it
was
from
inside
the
fence
that
my
brother
saw,
not
10
feet
away
from
him,
the
newborn
calf
slither
on
to
the
grass,
unfurl
its
legs,
and
stand.
The
story
had
captivated
me
and
stirred
my
jealousy
to
such
a
degree
that
I
could
recall
the
birth
almost
as
a
memory
of
my
own
I
wanted
to
return
there,
as
to
a
favourite
page
in
a
favourite
book.
It
is
curious
to
me
how
often
we
tend
to
describe
the
perfection
and
drama
of
the
natural
world,
its
sublime
qualities,
in
metaphors
of
fakery
or
artificiality:
"like
a
postcard",
"like
a
painting",
or
latterly
in
New
Zealand,
"like
a
scene
from
The
Lord
of
the
Rings".
The
impulse,
I
think,
comes
from
a
wish
to
apologise
for
the
limited
capacity
of
the
"real"
world.
To
grow
up
is
to
confront
the
disappointments
of
language,
in
a
way,
and
to
suffer
the
divorce
between
what
we
experience
and
what
we
imagine
to
be
real.
I
was
preemptively
disappointed,
setting
out
on
the
tandem
for
the
mauve
shadow
of
the
hills,
to
know
that
I
would
in
all
likelihood
see
no
newborn
calves,
that
our
adventure
would
have
a
different
character
to
the
adventure
undertaken
by
my
brother
and
my
father.
I
had
settled,
I
think,
into
an
adult
frame
of
mind.
I
drove
through
Arthur's
Pass
recently,
and
stopped
to
climb
Avalanche
Peak
for
the
first
time
in
several
years.
The
ascent
is
taxing,
rising
sharply
through
beech
forest
to
the
sudden
treeline
and
bare
grassy
peaks
above.
The
summit
offers
a
view
across
the
blue
ranges
and
snow-capped
summits
of
the
island's
keel.
The
final
length
of
the
ridgeline
stands
as
a
rocky
comb
of
shale
against
the
sky,
dropping
down
on
either
side
to
wide
scree
slopes
and
rocky
bluffs
and
nothing.
Across
the
valley
to
the
west
is
the
rumple
of
a
high
glacier,
a
face
of
snow;
to
the
east,
a
horseshoe
cup
of
grey
and
green.
And
yet
it
is
hard
to
describe
indescribable,
until
you're
up
there,
looking
down
because
the
mountain
is
something
other
than
its
substance,
something
more.
Travel
brochures
try
to
capture
the
quality
of
New
Zealand's
panoramas
with
adjectives
"pristine",
"untouched",
"majestic".
But
the
words
seem
cheap
and
insubstantial,
however
accurate
they
may
be,
in
the
face
of
the
real
thing.
The
language
of
description
is
always
a
matter
of
equivalence
(a
word
equals
the
thing
it
describes)
and
so
cannot
contend
with
the
sublime.
But
the
language
of
paradox,
oxymoron
and
subtle
contradiction
the
language
of
children
does
better.
Aotearoa
is
a
land
made
perfect
only
by
its
opposites,
the
water
and
the
air.
It
is
both
north
and
south
at
once.
It
is
a
land
that
casts
its
shadow
on
the
clouds.
This
essay
was
originally
printed
in
The
Guardian
on
October
17,
2013.