Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Bumpy ride through author's Wetlands
By Charlotte Roche
Translated by Tim Mohr
Harper Collins, 240 pages, $22.99
It's clear from the opening paragraphs of Charlotte Roche's debut novel that the reader is in for a bumpy ride. Our first meeting with our heroine, 18-year-old Helen Melmel, involves a graphic description of her hemorrhoids; she tells us that her doctor calls the bumps below the skin "the cauliflower."
And from there, we're off into mostly uncharted territory, as Roche -- a British-born, German-raised TV presenter -- has her sexually precocious character regale us with all her taboo-busting behaviours involving every bodily fluid, almost none of which can be described in the pages of a family newspaper
But to what end, you might ask?
Actually, it's pretty clear to what end: the rear one. Helen is in the hospital to have surgery on the aforementioned cauliflower, and she has the same tedious obsession with her afflicted area as most patients, going into great detail about its every twinge and excretion. (Roche's point seems to be that the anus should be no more disgusting than any other body part. Point taken, but you wouldn't want to read a blow-by-blow story about a guy recuperating from hip surgery, either. Much of Wetlands is like listening to your grandfather complain about his sciatica, except with more talk about smegma.)
To this, Roche adds in a half-assed (if you'll pardon the phrase) subplot about Helen's divorced parents, whom she is trying to bring back together by staying in the hospital as long as possible to force their meeting, and, of course, some childhood trauma.
The book has already caused a sensation in Europe, topping bestseller lists, causing fainting at readings and inspiring a debate about feminism versus pornography.
The book certainly can't be called pornographic -- it's far from titillating. It actually reads like a manifesto clumsily forced into novel form.
Roche was apparently inspired to write Wetlands (the German title is Feuchtgebiete, which directly translates somewhat less elegantly into Moist Patches) in the "feminine hygiene" aisle of a drugstore, where she was appalled at the many ways in which she was told to be lemony fresh.
Again, her point is taken, but anyone who is on a hobbyhorse about anything is a bit of a pedantic bore, and Helen is a pedantic bore about her body and the way she chooses to use it. From her hospital bed, she lectures the poor, unenlightened majority of us who don't regularly visit prostitutes or stick barbecue tongs in unlikely orifices or intentionally come in close contact with public toilet seats.
She's also a poorly drawn character -- more a collection of designed-to-shock anecdotes than a personality -- and an inconsistent one; she revels in her body's natural odours and functions and is totally disdainful of those who don't, but she's in the hospital because she aggravated a hemorrhoid by carelessly shaving the region, something a true Ms. Au Naturel would scarcely do.
Yes, it's true, women shouldn't feel compelled to behave the way Cosmopolitan magazine tells them to, and yes, our society is beholden to ridiculous standards of over-perfumed uber-hygiene. But just because Helen admits to enjoying popping zits or eating her own snot (among other bodily byproducts) doesn't make her admirable or interesting, nor does it make Wetlands a feminist tract -- or a good read.
Jill Wilson is a Free Press copy editor.
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition March 8, 2009 B7
More Books
- Back to Top
- Return to Books
More Books
(1 of 24 articles for this week)
Families seek apology, ways to prevent other deaths
05/18/2013 1:00 AM 0Poll
Most Popular Books
- Families seek apology, ways to prevent other deaths
- Nigerian novel critiques U.S. attitudes toward race
- PAPER CHASE: Give grad the gift of penny-pinching
- Anne Murray memoir blows the lid off image of fresh-faced singer
- Ultimate fighter learns from fear
- Historical romance crackles with imagination
- Hookup culture killing romance with sex
- Winnipeg Bestsellers
- Intriguing questions about love, memory, endurance
- Artist comes into own in early short stories
- Anne Murray memoir blows the lid off image of fresh-faced singer
- Families seek apology, ways to prevent other deaths
- In the end, they knew what they were fighting against
- Residential schools account sorrowful, triumphal
- Loving tribute to gay dad touching coming-of-age story
- Nigerian novel critiques U.S. attitudes toward race
- Mennonite women's new cookbook geared to celebrating life's milestones
- Short-fiction contest winners announced
- Life of Pi author Martel hears from Obama
- Hookup culture killing romance with sex
- Anne Murray memoir blows the lid off image of fresh-faced singer
- Drunk Mom covers booze, but not the baby
- A long, dangerous road: Refugees share their journeys from Africa to Manitoba
- Cosmologist fights to bring real time back into physics
- Life of Pi author Martel hears from Obama
- Corporate control main problem with GMOs
- In the end, they knew what they were fighting against
- Paul Anka did it the Las Vegas way
- Families seek apology, ways to prevent other deaths
- Tightly crafted first novel will take your breath away
- Pat Conroy memoir about his father, 'The Death of Santini,' coming out in October
- Ultimate fighter learns from fear
- Short-fiction contest winners announced
- Families seek apology, ways to prevent other deaths
- Life of Pi author Martel hears from Obama
- Corporate control main problem with GMOs
- Winnipeg Bestsellers
- CHILDREN'S BOOKS: Start of Fergus trilogy an action-packed plot
- PAPER CHASE: Pasternak in massive anthology
- Less is more: Danish chef Trine Hahnemann promotes sustainable, seasonal eating
- Mommy drinks because you cry!
- SUSPENSE: Original European sleuth deserves wider audience
- Pat Conroy memoir about his father, 'The Death of Santini,' coming out in October
- Ultimate fighter learns from fear
Ads by Google












You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
Have Your Say
New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010.