25 December 2021
'A Child's Song of Christmas' by Marjorie Pickthall
23 December 2021
Just in Time for Christmas!
The new issue of Canadian Notes & Queries arrives at a busy time of year, which suits me just fine. I usually race through each issue, reading it from cover to cover, but am now forced to slow the pace and savour.
And so, all I've read thus far is Seth's regular column 'The Landscape.' The beginning raised a smile of self-recognition:
There are still a few places in Ontario where one can find shelves (or piles) of old second hand books for sale that have not been curated. Randomly acquired, roughly heaped into sections, and priced not by author and title but by paperback or hardcover status alone. These places are dwindling fast but I still know a few prime spots. Don't expect me to name them or tell you where they're located though. s if. I don't want you going there. These are my secret places. My old books! Keep out.
Seth's focus this time is The Canada Permanent Story, 1855-1955. "These corporate books weren't really meant to be perused," he writes, yet Seth has done just that, sharing this endpaper illustration:
Garnett Weston 1890 - 1980 RIP |
Given that it's the season... Anyone looking for a last minute Christmas gift can't do much better than a subscription to Canadian Notes & Queries. I bought a couple. You can, too!Stephanie BolsterAlex BoydKornella DrianovakiMegan DurnfordStacey EastonAndré ForgetStephen FowlerAlex GoodRonald L GrimesBrett Joseph GrubisicLuke HathawayDavid HuebertMark Anthony JarmanKate KennedyAris KeshavM Travis LaneRohen MaitzenDancy MasonDavid MasonJeff MillerNofelJ R PattersonShazia Hafiz RamjiPatricia RobertsonNaben RuthnumCal SepuliaDrew TapleyRob TaylorCarl WattsBruce Whitman
20 December 2021
Sometimes a Fantasy
Kent Thompson
Toronto: Macmillan of Canada, 1973
200 pages
Describing The Tenants were Corrie and Tennie as a good debut novel seems faint praise, but I'd have said the same had it been a second or third novel. The narrator is William A Boyd, a disgruntled American schoolteacher who, lured by the charms of New Brunswick, purchases a rundown Fredericton duplex. His idea is to retire, occupy one half, and live off the rent of the other.
It all seems a bit crazy. Boyd is well south of forty and has little in the way of savings (though he'd claim otherwise). Taking ownership means taking on a substantial mortgage. And then there's the furnace, which heats both sides of the duplex. Boyd, who takes pride in his new role as a landlord, was ignorant of this fact. And he's never experienced a Fredericton winter.
The letter was headed by the letterhead, which of course served as a return address: "River Idyll Motel: Cabins and Cottages – Reasonable Prices." Tennie had neatly inked in the date under the slogan. But it was a mistake to use that stationary provided by the hotel. I should never have done that myself, even if it meant buying more paper. The very address had a touch of panic to it.
An immigrant from the United States to Canada comes always under the shadow of history – or to be specific, the shadow of Benedict Arnold. Arnold, who was considered to be a traitor to both king and Congress (an American easily forgets the first treachery)...
By ugly, I mean that which is offensively temporary. it is perfectly illustrated by the K-Mart Shopping Plaza (at the top of Smyth Street Hill in Fredericton, New Brunswick). It is self-evident that ugliness debases men. Unless he is made of very stern stuff indeed, a man will act under the influence of his surroundings. Put a man in prison - and he will act like a prisoner. Surround a man with the shoddy goods of contemporaneity, and he will act in proportion to their measure.
K-Mart Shopping Plaza, Frederiction, 1968 |
I was eating a hot dog with relish and mustard when I heard this song which a youngster was playing – probably listening to the record on the pretence of buying it. Finishing my hot dog, and my coffee I inquired of a clerk about the song. That was a rather pleasant tune, I said. "Why," he said, as if surprised I didn't know, "that's Anne Murray."Boyd is so struck by the sweet songbird of Springhill that he not only buys the album (What About Me), but lays out a further $66.95 (nearly $415 today) in the purchase of a stereophonic record player in order to play it.
"Anne Murray?" I said.
He had divined that I was something of a stranger, and explained yo me thatAnne Murray had gone to the University of New Brunswick, "up the hill" and that she had graduated in 1966.
Who can blame him? The title track is wonderful:
"You can't seriously mean you're going to deport all the Americans. Look you hired us to do a job. You can't turn us back when the job is finished!"
"Why not?" repeated Manners. "That's what one does to itinerant labour."
I really should give it a careful second read.
It's just hard to find the time these days.
About the author: Kent Thompson taught literature and creative writing at the University of New Brunswick. Born American, Canada was his home. Kent Thompson died this past summer.
Kent Elgin Thompson 2 February 1936, Waukegan, Illinois - 13 August 2021, Annapolis Royal , Nova Scotia |
Though there was but one printing, used copies are inexpensive (if uncommon).
14 December 2021
A Good Old Soldier
Old Soldier
Frederick Niven
London: Collins, 1936
250 pages
Stewart Reid lives in a small flat with his wife and two young sons in Edinburgh's east end. Minnie sleeps in the one bedroom; the boys share a "concealed bed" in the parlour. Stewart's days begin in a cot next to the stove in the camped kitchen. The missus can't abide this thrashing about under the covers.
Read nothing into that.
Stewart loves Minnie. Minnie loves Stewart. Their lives are happy. Each Friday night, Minnie meets her man as he leaves work. He hands her his pay packet. She withdraws a shilling and he has a dram at the local. Minnie enjoys a bottle of lemonade.
"He's a man who needs a woman to look after him, or a sergeant," says Todd, the oldest of the old soldiers.
Old Soldier is a quiet novel. Nothing much happens. After several dozen pages, one looks about in search of a plot device. Might it be Mackenzie Brothers' flirtatious charwoman Nell Drummond, she of the swinging skirt? Could it have something to do with cold Rev Dr Churchkirk's refusal to be held accountable for the debts of his wife and daughter? How about paymaster Beck's suggestion that Stewart's holiday allotment be held back, lest the old soldier spend it on... you know, his holiday?
Wait, it's the holiday itself, right?
But no, Old Soldier is a tale of everyday life. Its hero is a man who ventures out on a Monday, does drudgery, and suffers an indignity or two for the love of his wife and boys. On Tuesday, he rises in his kitchen cot and prepares for the same. Stewart becomes complaisant. The reader becomes complaisant. When something of significance does happen – remarkably late in the novel – the reader may be caught off guard.
I know I was.
These things happen to other people. Not to me. Not to Stewart Reid.
And yet he continues on, an old soldier.
Dedication: To the author's wife, journalist Mary Pauline Thorne-Quelch.
Object: Purchased last year for £3.00 from a bookstore in Wallingford, England, my copy once belonged to the Newlands Circulating Library of Fiction, 16 Stafford St, Shandwick Place, Edinburgh. I'm sad to report that the address is now taken up by a Frontiers store.
I found this piece of ephemera glued to page 187:
The novel is followed six full-page adverts for other Niven titles: The Flying Years, Triumph, Mrs. Barry, The Rich Wife, The Paisley Shawl, and The Three Marys.
Access: As far as I've been able to determine, the novel enjoyed just one edition and one printing. A bookseller in Tamworth, England offers an ex-library copy at £8.00.
That's it.
It can be read online here courtesy of the Faded Page.
06 December 2021
The Ten Best Book Buys of 2021... and much more!
No surprise, I suppose.
Doubt it.
I purchased Quest for Pajaro after having been invited to comment on Allan's work at this year's Toronto Jewish Film Festival. While not his best book, it is his most intriguing. There hadn't been many many Canadian science fiction romances before 1957 – still aren't. What's more, the novel's linchpin is an experimental jet known as the "Arrow."
Bruce Petty's gorgeous jacket illustration puts it over the top.
What follows is the rest of the ten best:
Horace Brown
Pickering, ON: Global
Horace Brown's adaptation of this film noir shot in Quebec City, for years I'd hoped to find a reasonably-priced copy. This year I did (US$89.95).
E. Louise Cushing
New York: Arcadia, 1956
A mystery novel that begins with the discovery of a body in a Montreal bookstore, since I'd long been searching for this novel. Might it be a candidate for reissue as a Ricochet Book?
Nope.
Still, I'm still happy to have it in my collection.
Basil King
Claire Martin
I've admired Claire Martin since reading Dans un gant de fer in CEGEP. David Lobdell's translation of her Doux-Amer deserves a return to print. Imagine the thrill in finding three signed Martins during my recent visit to Quebec City. This is one.
Christopher Plummer
Toronto: Random House,
I'm slowly been buying them back. This signed copy was found at the Kemptville Youth Centre Book Fair.
Toronto: Standard
I own many copies of Beautiful Joe, but this is by far the most... um, beautiful. At one dollar, it was the least expensive book I purchased this year.
The Countess of Aberdeen provides an introduction!
Ottawa: Éditions Fides, 1967
Another Quebec City find, I came upon this inscribed, slip-cased edition on the very same day I made my pilgrimage to the author's home.
I vow to read it in the New Year.
Garnett Weston
New York: Messner, 1944
This old novel proved to be 2021's most unpleasant, stomach-turning read. Voyeurism, adultery, greed, murder, and something approaching necrophilia figure.
Good fun from a Toronto boy who made a killing in Hollywood before retiring to Vancouver island.
Lee Goldberg noted my interest in the novels of former Vancouver newspaperman Tom Ardies (Their Man in the White House, Kosygan is Coming) and was kind enough to send me newly published copies of This Briefcase is Going to Explode, Pandemic, Balboa Firefly, and Manila Time (the latter two written under Ardies' Jack Trolley nom de plume).
Lee is in the process of reissuing Ardies' entire bibliography through Brash Books.
More power to him!
Fraser Sutherland died this earlier this year. I was honoured to have been asked to provide an obituary for the Globe & Mail. One of the greatest challenges in its writing concerned family, specifically the name of a sibling, an older brother, who had died at a young age. Our newspaper of record is insistent on such things. It seemed not one of Fraser's friends could quite remember... and then one came through, which led me to this uncommon chapbook:
RIP, Fraser. You are much missed.
01 December 2021
The 1921 Globe 100 206: Don't Mention the War
The Globe, 3 December 1921 |
The Great War must surely have ranked as the preeminent condition. There were years in which the conflict came close to dominating 'Recent Books and the Outlook.' The 1920 edition had an entire section devoted to books about the war:
Not only is the Great War barely mentioned in the 1921 'Recent Books and the Outlook,' just three of its 206 books are related to the bloodshed just twenty-four months past. Great War poetry disappears entirely... and with it poetry. I exaggerate, but only slightly. Eight volumes of verse are listed, down from nineteen the previous year; four are Canadian:
My Pocket Beryl - Mary Josephine BensonLater Poems - Bliss CarmanBill Boram: A Ballad - Robert NorwoodBeauty and Life - Duncan Campbell Scott
Fiction in other countries has been disappointing during the last year, and has certainly not proved as rich as biography or history. American readers fall into two classes says the New York Times Book Review, those who like John Dos Passos' "The Three Soldiers" and those who do not.The correct title is Three Soldiers.
My copy (New York: Doran, 1921) |
The Lone Trail - Luke AllanAnne of the Marshland - Lady ByngBarriers - Lady ByngTo Him That Hath - Ralph ConnorThe Lobstick Trail - Douglas DurkinThe Gift of the Gods - Pearl FoleyRed Meekins - W.A. FraserMaria Chapdelaine - Louis Hemon [trans W.H. Blake]Maria Chapdelaine - Louis Hemon [trans Andrew Macphail]The Quest of Alistair - Robert A. HoodThe Hickory Stick - Nina Moore JamiesonLittle Miss Melody - Marian KeithThe Conquest of Fear - Basil KingPartner of Chance - H.H. KnibbsThe Snowshoe Trail - Edison MarshallPurple Springs - Nellie McClungRilla of Ingleside - L.M. MontgomeryAre All Men Alike? - Arthur StringerThe Spoilers of the Valley - Robert Watson
As my 1942 World Library edition (above) suggests, The Conquest of Fear is a work of philosophy. The Globe describes it at a novel:
The inclusion of Arthur Stringer's Are All Men Alike? is just as intriguing. The author published two books in 1921, the other being his heart-breaking roman à clef The Wine of Life. By far the finest Stringer I've read thus far, my dream is to one day bring out an edition featuring the twenty-four James Montgomery Flagg illustrations it inspired.
I haven't read it, nor have I read Jess of the Rebel Trail or Little Miss Melody. I have read Miriam of Queen's and The Window Gazer, both of which disappointed. The Empty Sack is my very favourite Basil King title, and yet it too pales beside The Wine of Life.
What do I know? I think Three Soldiers is the best novel of 1921.
Yes, I'm one of those who like it.
29 November 2021
Talking John Glassco With Patricia Godbout
Last week, I has the pleasure of joining Alexandra Irimia, Bilal Hashmi, Patricia Godbout, Phyllis Aronoff, and Arianne Des Rochers for the 2021 John Glassco Translation Prize Gala.
My congratulations to this year's recipient Luba Markovskaia for Notes de terrain pour la toundra alpine, her translation of Elena Johnson's Field Notes for the Alpine Tundra.
The streamed event has been preserved for posterity on YouTube:
Arianne Des Rocher delivers the jury statement at 51:40, which is followed by Luba Markovskaia's acceptance speech.
Beginning at 19:45, my participation takes the form of a discussion of Glassco's life and work with Patricia Godbout. Host Alexandra Irimia serves as moderator. What a pleasure it was to finally meet Prof Godbout... if only virtually. She's does such good work. I've long admired her Traduction littéraire et sociabilité interculturelle au Canada (1950-1960).
Here's hoping for a healthier 2022, and that the John Glassco Translation Prize Gala can return to being an in-person event.