The Essence of the Thing


The Essence of the Thing is a novel by Australian author Madeleine St John. It was shortlisted for the List of winners and shortlisted authors of the [Booker Prize for Fiction|Man Booker Prize] in 1997. The novel is uniquely formatted, having a total of 69 chapters in just 234 pages. St John aims to depict the titular essence of a specific thing in each individual chapter.

Plot summary

The novel begins suddenly with the harsh end of the relationship between the protagonist Nicola Gatling and her lover Jonathan. As Nicola returns from a trip to the shops to get some cigarettes, she is told by Jonathan that he wants her to move out of the apartment they just decided to purchase together. Leaning on family and friends, Nicola attempts to remake her life over the ensuing several weeks in 1990s London.

Awards

Reviews

Gardner McFall in The New York Times in 1999 opined "In this novel, which was a finalist for the 1997 Booker Prize, Madeleine St. John shapes what might have been a bathetic story into a brisk, sophisticated and artful narrative buoyed by an ironic use of the religious imagery of hell, salvation and resurrection."
The book was re-issued in 2013 as part of the Text Publishing Text Classics series. At the time of the publication of that edition Gay Lynch wrote in Transnational Literature: "The prose is spare, supple and elegant, and constructed for the most part in dialogue that, occasionally, falls into a mechanical 'jolly hockey-sticks' register, with frequent play on the words 'whizzy' and the suffix 'ish'...Nevertheless, St John is a fine writer and this book is no grungy Australian bildungsroman; it is more a comedy of manners, perhaps or a Roman à clef."