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Rose Lucas reviews Claustrophobia by Tracy Ryan
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The prolific Tracy Ryan’s new novel, Claustrophobia, is a smart and fast-paced hurtle through lust, obsession, and stultifying patterns of dependency and self-delusion. Written in a low-key, ironic style, Ryan borrows from tropes of crime fiction, in particular the novels of Patricia Highsmith, as well as the double-crossing figure of the femme fatale, to tell the story of Pen, a seemingly ordinary and slightly bored woman from the Perth hills. Pen is married to Derrick, whom she has encouraged to succeed in the world, albeit in modest ways, since the emotional breakdown which preceded their meeting. Ten years on, working part-time at Derrick’s school and unable to have children, Pen’s motivation is running low. Incapable of mustering the energy to clear the house or to complete the renovation which has dragged on for years, Pen’s life is suddenly and explosively changed when she finds a returned letter Derrick had sent to his previous lover – the lover whose rejection had sent him into despair.

Book 1 Title: Claustrophobia
Book Author: Tracy Ryan
Book 1 Biblio: Transit Lounge, $29.95 pb, 240 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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Pen’s response to the letter is complicated and leads her – and the reader – into deep and dangerous waters. Pen is horrified that her cosy situation with Derrick might have been built upon deception, and anxious to protect him from the toxicity which Kathleen Nancarrow represents; she is also determined to locate the woman who has so invaded her life. Roused from her suburban lethargy, Pen herself becomes the stalker as she pursues Kathleen, pushing complex identifications to frightening levels. Reminiscent of Dorothy Porter’s The Monkey’s Mask (2000), Ryan’s narrative reframes the crime genre by confusing the figures of hunter and hunted, detective and crime scene, and exposing illicit sexual desire and emotional dependency as the disruptive forces which lead to the novel’s chilling conclusion. Who controls whom? Ryan plays her cards close to the very last.

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