The Slap by Christos Tsiolkas
During my recent, very enriching camping trip, I had time to read a book in its entirety from start to finish.
It was luxurious.
The book, which I highly recommend, was The Slap by Australian writer Christos Tsiolkas.
Here is the back cover blurb:
At a suburban barbecue, a man slaps a child who is not his own.
This event has a shocking ricochet effect on a group of people, mostly friends, who are directly or indirectly influenced by the event.
In this remarkable novel, Christos Tsiolkas turns his unflinching and all-seeing eye onto that which connects us all: the modern family and domestic life in the twenty-first century.
The Slap is told from the points of view of eight people who were present at the barbecue. The slap and its consequences force them all to question their own families and the way they live, their expectations, beliefs and desires.
What unfolds is a powerful, haunting novel about love, sex and marriage, parenting and children, and the fury and intensity - all the passions and conflicting beliefs - that family can arouse.
In its clear-eyed and forensic dissection of the ever-growing middle class and its aspirations and fears, The Slap is also a poignant, provocative novel about the nature of loyalty and happiness, compromise and truth.
It is an engaging, engrossing and enticing story, largely because Christos Tsiolkas writes without fear.
Thank you Christos for writing such a deliciously gutsy book.
Has anyone else read The Slap?
By Jodie Benveniste, director of Parent Wellbeing.

