Elizabeth Smither. Photo / Jane Dove Juneau
The Piano Girls
by Elizabeth Smither
(Quentin Wilson Publishing, $35)
Elizabeth Smither's contribution to the ecosystem of New Zealand literature is immense— award-winning poetry, six novels, six short story collections, as well as memoirs. Her new story collection, The Piano Girls, is dense with linked melodies and recurring motifs. Each story is
composed with the gentle touch and elegance of an assured writer.
The book is brimming with tales - 20 stories -and relationships, both familial and romantic. In the title story, three daughters commemorate their late mother by playing a piano recital on her birthday each year. The role of mother is further explored in the stories "Gravy" and "Toothpaste", and Smither worries at the burdens and intricacies of the maternal, exposing hard truths.
Fathers often show their face in Smither's stories only to dole out money. In both "Money" and "The Hotel", fathers give loans along with unwelcome advice, although one character finds the lesson learned from her father - "A fool and his money are soon parted" - continues to influence her long after his death.
In "The Hotel", Rosie is taken by her boyfriend to a sumptuous and expensive lodge near the mountains. She's wined and dined and although she's aware something significant will occur on the trip, she understands it'll only happen on a timeline of his choosing. At no point in the story does Rosie have autonomy over her destiny — and when the blow is dealt, it's done with Smither's classic pianissimo gentleness. Love, as Amy Winehouse once sang, is sometimes a losing game.