What Lies Beneath: Memoir and Memory

In her striking work of creative nonfiction What Lies Beneath, novelist, short story writer, scriptwriter and playwright Elspeth Sandys shares her voyage into memoir and its complex relationship with memory.

At Going West in 2015, Sandys was joined in conversation by old friend and Festival founder Murray Gray.

Eloquent and humorous, she talks of her search for an emotional truth, uncovering the story of her birth parents, reimagining the past and the power of the landscape.

Elspeth declares that she is fascinated by what we forget, and that who we are is largely conditioned by what we forget as much as what we remember.

Elspeth Sandys has had many names. Born Frances Hilton James in 1940, she became Elspeth Sandilands Somerville on the occasion of her adoption into the prominent Dunedin Somerville clan at the age of nine months. The circumstances of her birth and adoption, and their impact on her childhood, are the subject of the first volume of her memoir, What Lies Beneath.

While Elspeth was happy among the ebullient and welcoming Somerville clan, she had a difficult relationship with her adoptive mother, who was frequently hospitalised with mental health problems. Elspeth’s search for her birth parents did not begin until much later in her adult life. What she discovered after an exhaustive search provided answers that were both disturbing and, ultimately, rewarding. What Lies Beneath is a searing, amusing, and never less than gripping tale of a difficult life, beautifully told.

The author of nine novels, two collections of short stories, numerous plays and adaptations for the BBC and RNZ and scripts for film and television, in 2006 Elspeth was made an Officer of the NZ Order of Merit for Services to literature.

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