Port Mungo
by Patrick McGrath
A review by Andrew O'Hehir
British novelist Patrick McGrath is the acknowledged master of the super-unreliable
narrator. So one would be wise to approach Gin Rathbone, the "tall, thin,
untidy Englishwoman" who narrates his new book, Port Mungo, with considerable
caution. But Gin isn't deranged after the fashion of the nut-case narrators of
McGrath's Spider
or Dr.
Haggard's Disease -- or rather, she's deranged in her own uniquely repressed
and uniquely English way.
The story of Gin and her rangy, charismatic brother Jack, a tormented painter
she believes to be a genius (and whom we suspect, quite early on, may be something
quite different), is not perhaps as harrowing as the dark psychological sagas
of McGrath's earlier novels. But it's a rough enough ride on its own terms,
and Port Mungo is an enthralling and eventful yarn, fueled by sex and
family secrets, that careens from the west of Ireland to London to New York's
SoHo art ghetto in the fecund 1970s to the seedy tropical backwater that lends
the novel its title. (Connoisseurs of the Caribbean coast of Central America
can debate what real-life city Port Mungo most resembles; my money is on Puerto
Barrios, Guatemala.)
McGrath has constructed a complicated chronological jigsaw puzzle; Gin provides
us with several different simultaneous and overlapping times and places. Here
is the crumpled, middle-aged Jack, living off Gin in New York after the death
of his teenage daughter Peg in Port Mungo -- and, later still, being reunited
with Anna, the younger daughter who was spirited away to England after Peg's
death. Here is the cocksure 17-year-old Jack, as a London art student, seducing
and being seduced by Vera Savage, a drunken, blond painter 13 years his senior.
Or the even younger Jack, conducting the terrified Gin in a small boat into
a black squall off Achill Island in County Mayo. Here is Gin surprising Jack
as their tutor, the improbably named Miss Splendour, provides him with a little
extracurricular service.
It's clear from the first few pages of Port Mungo that all is not right
with the Rathbones, and Gin herself seems aware, though perhaps not as aware
as she should be, that her intense relationship with her brother is a little,
well, excessive. To the extent that Port Mungo is a mystery built around
a set of questions about the Rathbone family -- how did Peg die? Why is Vera
such an incorrigible tramp and alcoholic? Why was Anna abruptly sent off to
be raised by her bourgeois Uncle Gerald? -- you'll probably figure out the answers
long before the book is over.
But perhaps the mysteries of Port Mungo are only devices McGrath uses
in order to take us elsewhere; this is the kind of book that plants a seed in
your mind that will germinate days or weeks later. McGrath is painting on a
larger canvas than in his earlier works, and at the same time aiming for a subtler
effect. One can't avoid thinking of the parallels between the book itself and
the sweat-and-booze-soaked "tropicalist" paintings Jack creates in
Port Mungo, which seem both to be the finest works of his career and to provide
evidence of his mental and moral decline.
In writing about the kinds of people his readers are likely to know, instead
of those they're likely to avoid on the street, McGrath is trying to illustrate
the pitfalls and self-deceptions of both the artistic life and so-called normal
existence. Gin and Jack aren't crazy or evil, exactly. They're attractive but
badly damaged people -- damaged in ways they can't quite grasp -- and at least
one of them (maybe both) has done inexcusable things. In that, they're like
a lot of us. If Port Mungo in the last analysis isn't quite the masterwork
McGrath has set out to write, it's still a mesmerizing tropical tale with unforgettable
characters, and an intriguing new direction for this supremely talented novelist.
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