Reviews

The Kindness of Birds by Merlinda Bobis

literary_hazelnut's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful reflective medium-paced

4.5

tasmanian_bibliophile's review against another edition

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4.0

‘Love sings in any language.’

Contained within the beautiful cover of this book are fourteen short stories. They are linked, sharing common characters and the symbolism of birds. The stories are set in Australia and the Philippines and pay homage to kindness and kinship.

The fourteen short stories are:

Note: I have copied this detail from the Spinifex Press website (https://www.spinifexpress.com.au/shop/p/9781925950304) because I wanted to include a synopsis of each of the stories so that the links between them can be seen and appreciated.

‘O Beautiful Co-Spirit.’ At a Belconnen funeral parlour, Filipina-Australian Pilar and Malaysian-Australian Farah dress Farah’s deceased lover Lucia, an Italian-Australian, while trying to make peace after a fight over noisy cockatoos. As they lay the dead, both remember rituals from their respective Catholic and Islamic traditions, and their shared belief in kindness for all who pass.

‘When the Crow Turns White.’ During the 2020 hailstorm in Canberra, in the Parliament House courtyard, a crow is injured. The elemental develops into a magical story about grace and kindness that overturn politics and spin, and domestic violence. This event changes the life of Corazon, a Filipina-Australian who cleans the chamber of the House of Representatives with her friend Orla, an Irish-Australian.

‘The Kindness of Birds.’ After the death of her parents, Filipina-Australian Nenita and her Latvian-Australian husband Arvis walk along Lake Burley Griffin comforted by a host of birds real and remembered between Legazpi (Philippines) and Canberra (Australia), especially the orioles who sang to her father as he was dying. This comfort inspires her to believe that ‘She’ll be apples, she’ll be birds.’

‘The Air of the Times.’ In a Manila hotel, poet Remy and sister Belen, a revolutionary, reconnect. Their touchstone is a bottle of Nina Ricci perfume L’Air Du Temps (“The Air of the Times”) with a cap of intertwined doves: a gift from Remy’s friend, 86-year old Werner who just died in Sydney. The German Jew lost his family in the Holocaust. Between his and the sisters’ story of loss and war in the Philippines and Germany, the air of time flows with the hope for peace.

‘Candido’s Revolution.’ In 1800s Broome, indentured ‘Manilamen’ pearl divers, Candido and Francisco, win the lottery and donate their winnings towards buying a printing press that assists the Philippine revolution against colonial Spain. They turn revolutionaries and are executed by the Spanish in 1897. With these historical facts, in 2019 Remy researches Candido’s story in Broome and conjures a love story set in 1893 between Candido and Mary, a Noongar woman. It’s Remy’s way of coming to terms with the assassination of her sister Belen in Manila in 1996. Birds from these different periods hover around the layered storytelling.

‘My Tender Tender.’ At The Roey’s bar in Broome, Nenita and Arvis meet 91-year old Aboriginal Uncle Freddy, a Filipino-Javanese-Yawuru who’s one of the last remaining hard-hat pearl divers of Broome and Darwin. The meeting reveals kinships in story and grief: Nenita’s father has just died at 91.

‘My Father’s Australia.’ It’s the wake of Nenita’s father in Legazpi. In the coffin, he’s dressed in a blue suit that she bought from DJs years ago, so he could fly “looking nice” when he visits her in Australia. The visit never happened. In this story of loss and broken family ties woven across Legazpi, Canberra and Charles de Gaulle airport, Nenita is sustained by remembering kindness, notwithstanding the lack of it.

‘Naming the Flowers.’ After her mother’s funeral, Nenita cleans up the family house in Legazpi. She finds a poem written in her mother’s longhand and the photos of the flowers in her mother’s garden, and those that friends in Canberra gave her after her father died. Between the memory of naming the flowers with her mother in this house and with her friends in Canberra, she tries to name her grief. In her chest, a bird tries to fly out.

‘The Sleep of Apples.’ As the bushfires rage in New South Wales and Victoria, friends Nenita and Ella drive around Tasmania after not seeing each other for more than ten years. Amidst ripening apple orchards and Tassie’s irrepressible birds, they remember Robert, Ella’s ex-husband and Nenita’s friend, who hanged himself in early 2000. This unresolved loss threads other losses across the Philippines, Afghanistan, Cambodia, and the US with a restorative idyll in Penang.

‘My Love, My Nerūsē.’ COVID-19 lockdown. Nenita and Arvis affirm “kindness both ways” in relation to their histories of loss and the ongoing grieving around the world, as weebills visit the cedars outside their apartment. Nerūsē: “does not rust”, like love from Latvia to Australia, the Philippines and around the world.

‘Singing Back.’ Filipino international student Andres, an indigenous Agta from Bikol, is doing a PhD on Avian-Human Kinship at the Australian National University. He’s a casual cleaner at a Canberra hotel where he meets receptionist Sinéad, an Environmental Science student at University of Canberra. Both just lost their jobs (COVID lay-offs) when Andres learns that grandmother in the Philippines is sick with COVID. As they have their last lunch together in Haig Park, Andres’ family history on the slopes of Mayon Volcano is revealed as intertwined with his PhD on birds. The revelations weave with their “almost love story”.

‘Grandma Owl.’ Filipina-Australian Luningning and her six-year- old grandson Victor are self-isolating in Wollongong after returning from the Philippines on a flight with a COVID case. They survive the quarantine with the help of Matilda, their Chilean-Australian neighbour, and a collection of owls. But Luningning is trying to survive something deeper: her unresolved grief over the death of Victor’s father.

‘Angels.’ COVID time. Nenita is diagnosed with cancer. This is her cancer journey amidst the kindness of nurses, doctors, carers, and birds — angels all!

‘Ode to Joy.’ Nenita re-traces her vexed life in Wollongong in the 90s that leads to her breakdown and aborted suicide. Her memories are threaded by the constancy of water, birds, and kindred souls from different places and cultures — all that kept her alive and returned her to joy.

Each of these stories spoke to me, but my absolute favourite was ‘Grandma Owl’.

‘Kindness cannot self-isolate. It moves both ways and all ways, like breath.’

I borrowed a copy of this book initially to read, but I will be buying my own copy. I loved much of the imagery and the connectedness of these stories.

Jennifer Cameron-Smith

ladyj95's review against another edition

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I'm actually really disappointed I didn't get into this book. It wasn't my thing. The writing was sweet, but I lost interest so quickly. 

kimswhims's review against another edition

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5.0

I adored this short story collection.
I share a fixation on birds and I can hear the cockatoos and the currawongs outside, one cockatoo is nibbling on some sunflower seeds just outside my window. Later on I expect a visit from a pair of crested pigeons that nest in my garden.
Each of these stories flow through with the symbol of a different type of bird guiding the way and each story is also guided by kindness. A pandemic of kindness is just what we need at the moment and these stories guide us in that direction.
A number of different subjects are handled here, a history of Aus and the Philippines, particularly with filipinos who went to Broome and Darwin during and possibly before European settlement, some to do with the pearling industry, escaping other political trouble (which I would really be interested in seeing developed as a novel). There are also contemporary stories that give us aspects of the covid19 pandemic which we have all just gone through and are still going through. It's the first time I've seen that described in fiction and it's done exceptionally well.
The award winning author, now lives locally to me and a couple of years ago I very much enjoyed her poetry collection [b:Accidents of Composition|34957255|Accidents of Composition|Merlinda Bobis|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1494051982l/34957255._SX50_.jpg|56231318] and have my own copy.
I've gifted a copy of this short story collection to my daughter-in-law, who came from the Philippines to do her PhD in Medical engineering here, her naughty MIL is distracting her a little with great literature :D
Highly recommended. I just hope there are enough copies left by the time I can get around to buying my own.

indak's review against another edition

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4.0

Remember the kindness, remember it kindly.

ariannevlsqz's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful relaxing slow-paced

4.0

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