Reviewed by Trish Palmer for S&S AU and Bluewolf Reviews.
Erin H0rtle’s story is about a young girl’s journey from childhood to adulthood. A Catalogue of Love is rich with experiences and enhanced with marvellous descriptive writing. We are taken on Neika’s journey through her early days and are privy to her most intimate thoughts and opinions.
Neika, her brother Heath, mother and father are a tight knit happy family. They live an idyllic life on Bruny Island. But the young mother dies and although father is bereft, he maintains the warmth and love in the family. They live to surf and immerse themselves in the ocean.
Their neighbour Sean, a farmer nearby, comes to help and when Neika sees him in bed with her father, she realises that dad loves women and men. The story evolves around the love and steadfast support of her two fathers who nurture her in every way.
As she grows the girl wonders how different life would have been with a mother, but there are only a few occasions when she feels this way. The author explores the advice that was given to the girl at school when a kid teased her about her gay father. “Oh yes he is, she said, but your father is often drunk, isn’t he?”
There is such a comfortable acceptance that the family persuade Sean to enter his lamingtons in the show, competing with the CWA ladies. As Neika becomes a teenager, she longs for a relationship and makes mistakes in decisions.
As an adult, Neika returns to Bruny Island to work as a PHD student. She reflects on many issues and shares thoughts with her best friend Meg. In these conversations, the young woman explores the ideas of love, and how her life is like a card catalogue. The outside, her body, but inside, many cards shuffled around to indicate her thoughts, experiences and desires.
The greatest strength of this engrossing read is the description of the sea, and how Neika a female surfer, examines the movement of water and how her passion is to master each wave.