Win a year of free pizza at PizzaExpress

Do not be beguiled by the charming book jacket with its vase of flowers, or the tulip-patterned end-papers. Helen Garner's new novel - the first for 16 years from this gritty Australian writer - is not a homely comedy of manners but a matter of life and death.
It begins domestically enough with the narrator, Helen, a writer in her mid-sixties, making up the spare room of the title with considerately chosen bed linen for her cancer-stricken friend Nicola, who is coming to stay with her in Melbourne, where she will attend an alternative-therapy clinic. As it turns out, the clean sheets have to be changed throughout the night, since Nicola's treatment results in shuddering sweats as well as agonising pain, dismissed by Nicola as a sign that the cancer is on its way out.
Helen, who as well as sharing her creator's name and profession, possesses the same unflinching candour, needs to live as truthfully as her friend needs to live the lie that she will get better. With a permanent and ghastly smile “plastered across her face like latex”, and a forced flightiness - her conversation is sprinkled with “darling” and “divine” - Nicola's “tremendous performance of being alive” makes Helen feel that she is breathing “the sick air of falsehood”. While colluding in these attempts to deny death, Helen knows that her chicanery “injects poison into friendship, and makes a mockery of love”. But Nicola insists on practising the tyranny of the terminally ill, a tyranny it would be heartless to defy.
Dying is not Nicola's only problem. She has always been a free spirit, the courageous survivor of childhood rape, drugs and a nervous collapse; until her illness she has dashingly lived by herself in a remote hillside shack beyond Sydney's beaches. Belonging to nobody, she turns friends such as Helen into reluctant nurses. Employing real nurses would be out of the question, since their presence would suggest she was going to die. When Helen, broken by weariness and fright, can't cope any longer with Nicola's demands, Nicola says, “I have dozens of darling old school friends who live in Melbourne. They'll take me into their homes with all their hearts.” Such is her necessary self-delusion that she still sees herself as the irresistible companion she used to be. And this is why she plays down the pain forced on her by the clinic: “It does knock me around somewhat ... And I sometimes come home a wee bit under the weather.” It is her sympathy with Nicola's aloneness that keeps Helen washing sheets and escorting her to the clinic that Helen knows is just an expensive con run by an elusive charlatan. Helen herself, long divorced and living next door to her married daughter and grandchildren, is enviably rooted; she will never have to rely on the kindness of almost-strangers.
In all this heartache, jokes keep breaking through. Nicola's painkilling tablets are called Digesic. “Di-gesic”, Helen suggests, “is so you won't die.” There are sniggery discussions on whether coffee enemas require organic beans or whether instant will do. As the two women embark on a bumpy seesaw ride of brutal showdown followed by abashed acceptance until the inevitable and piteous end, you begin to understand what it is to belong, and not belong. In its bleak and highly comic storytelling, in spite, or perhaps, because of its subject matter, The Spare Room could be called a comedy of manners, in that its concern is how people behave towards each other and the repercussions of that behaviour. Its embattled characters are so real that by the last page you feel not just that you have read a magnificent novel but that you have experienced life itself.
The Spare Room by Helen Garner
Canongate £12.99 pp195
Buy the book from Books First £11.69 including free delivery
Explore your passion for food with the delights of Thai, Indian & Chinese cooking
In our new series, Tony Hawks takes a dry, wry look at modern life - junk mail, interminable meetings and snooty sales assistants
Read the training tips and advice that helped our London Triathletes
Read our exclusive 100 Years of Fleming and Bond interactive timeline, packed with original Times articles and reviews
The latest travel news plus the best hotels and gadgets for business travellers

Find tickets for:
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles
2007
£30,000
2008
£44,990
2008
£48,489
Great car insurance deals online
c.£75,000
GlosFirstmeansbusiness
Gloucestershire
£32,795 - £41,545
Universitry of Southampton
Southampton
£
Circa £100k
NHS
London
£23,500 + benefits
MI5
London
Some of the finest Apts & Penthouses
Across London
Great Investment, River Views
Luxury properties within exclusive development in
Chislehurst Kent
A new experience in Luxury Living
Multi–Centre
from Only £829pp
With Ramblers Worldwide Holidays!
£POA
List your property with two leading travel websites
£POA
Great travel insurance deals online
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times. Globrix Property Search - search houses for sale and rooms and property to rent in the UK. Milkround Job Search - for graduate careers in the UK. Visit our classified services and find jobs, used cars, property or holidays. Use our dating service, read our births, marriages and deaths announcements, or place your advertisement.
Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.