“Who gets to decide what is a good story?”
Elise, a high school English teacher is giving birth in the middle of a lockdown. Anthony’s mind is swarmed by a stabbing fantasy. Shai Anna becomes a capable midwife because she witnessed her aunt, and a dog, giving birth. Faduma watches Shai Anna keenly. Ryan keeps time. Mark guards the door. Thanh sleeps in the corner. Maria, high school counsellor, manages the guilt after calling the lockdown. Sam speaks from the grave and the collective voice of the entire Grade 12 English class worries about what comes next, for them, for the baby, for the world.
BORN is told in sections CRAMP, BLOOD, BREATHE, GUSH, EXPAND, CONTRACT, PUSH, BORN and in the voices of various people trapped in a high school during a lockdown, while the English teacher gives birth. The situation—and just existing as a teenager—is already fraught with so much tension, it made me think about the fragility of human connectedness. How do our stories play out when we consider that each of sees things differently, each of us is living our own pain, so how can we appreciate others’? What do we mean to one another, does human connection mean anything if our stories will be told in different ways? How will we be seen by others in the larger narrative?
While some characters consider “The many ways we find to betray each other, mostly without meaning to.… Of how love morphs, with misunderstanding, with misfiring, into anger.” Or how their mere existence is “inappropriate when it comes to this earthly realm.” What we all want “is to feel understood…That to feel understood is not to BE understood—but the effect?”
BORN is about human connectedness, a gorgeously presented novel centring several characters in a moment of extreme tension, but at a time (in the world, in OUR world) where our connections to one another are a flimsy tether of doubt, failure and an assumed meaninglessness. But Birrell offers us hope, that no matter what, each of us is an integral part of the story. This novel pulls you along with all that hope, because it is a very good story!