TDR Interview: Michel
Basilières
Michel Basilières is
the author of Black Bird, a comic novel about the October
Crisis. Basilières grew up in Montreal with his French father and Anglophone mother. He was ten years old at the time of the October Crisis, which he still remembers vividly. He now lives in Toronto, where he works as a bookseller while writing his second novel.
Danielle Couture interviewed Basilières
in August 2003. |
|
TDR: Salut! Comment ca va aujourd'hui?
Pas pire, merci. Toi?
TDR: How are you dealing with all of the publicity that
has surrounded "Black Bird" in the past few months? I
know that you work at a book store. I imagine that you
are being approached a lot by would-be-authors and
fans of your work. Is it ever "too much"?
Thankfully it's over now. It was very exciting and
fun, but it was also an enormous amount of stress and
pressure. I figured, like everyone else, I'd end up at
a small press and have to fight to get noticed.
Instead I found myself thrust into a very public role
for the first time in my life. It's not like you ever
imagine. It seems like it would be great, and it is,
but it changes the way you think, and it changes the
way people think about you. I found every relationship
I had was coloured by it, even if only in my own head.
It was like, for years I told people I was writing
this book, and they'd say, still? And after a while
they gave up on me, I don't know what they thought I
was doing - jerking off, probably. But now they see me
in a new light. Plus, I had been working hard for a
long time with no break, and even at my day job it
intruded. I'm a bookseller, so you can imagine my
co-workers were excited for me and very enthusiastic.
But I work in a large store, so there are a lot of
them, and after a while it was overkill to talk to
everyone about it all day long. I just wanted to do my
job and go home - where the revisions were waiting for
me. So in the year before it came out, it was like
this inescapable thing that loomed over me everywhere
I went. After spending so much time with the book in
complete privacy and obscurity, the mental switch was
extremely hard to make. Couple that with it being so
completely unexpected, and I was overwhelmed.
Of course I wouldn't give it up for anything. It's
really a dream come true. I was so stunned when Knopf
made me an offer I actually said to my buddy John,
"You never really expect your dreams to come true." I
kept thinking they'd call and say, "Just kidding!" I
worried about it even after the contract was signed.
And just as you really have no idea that there might
be some downside to it, you end up with perks you
didn't expect either. I got a lot of free meals out of
it, for instance. And people treat you like a pretty
girl, they do things for you, you get gifts, you get
great service. It's ridiculous, but it's fun.
And yes, you get approached by would-be authors. But
no one recognizes writers unless you're really famous,
so no fans. But the thing is, people approach you or
are interested not necessarily because its you, but
just because you're a writer. You could be any writer.
So you can't take it personally, it's not about you.
TDR: Tell us a bit about yourself. Your biography states
that you are the son of a French father and an
Anglophone mother. What was your experience growing up
in an interlingual family during the height of the
October Crisis?
I was ten, so I was going to school; plus it was
Halloween. My parents were both on the same side of
the independence debate: against it. My father was
_pur laine_, but by then he was about fifty and a
father and a small businessman, so he wasn't by any
means radically inclined. And he was perfectly
bilingual and to be honest seemed to prefer
anglophones. My mother is completely anglo, but she on
the other hand seemed to like the French more than
not. However, since she grew up in the working class,
it was hard for her to see the nationalist's point
about how the anglos had it any easier.
What's hardest for people today to understand is the
fear many people felt, both French and English. The
nationalist camp was closely associated in the
public's mind with the terrorists. Mailboxes had been
blowing up in Montreal for ten years and people were
killed. The October Crisis was the culmination of a
decade of violence, and many of the most prominent
cultural figures in Quebec were open sympathizers.
Crowds gathered at public concerts, singing Gilles Vigneault's "Gens du pays" and waving flags. Fights did break out on the streets
between French and English speakers. Not long before
1970, Pierre Trudeau, prime minister at the time, was
pelted by the crowd at a parade.
And when the Crisis finally erupted, it immediately
became the focus of world attention. And we were
invaded by the army. We were under martial law, and we
knew that anyone could be arrested and detained
without charge on the least pretext. And that
happened. 500 artists, writers, journalists,
musicians, poets and professors were rounded up and
incarcerated. People don't seem to understand when I
make this point about Canada, the country I grew up
in: we sent the army to arrest the intellectuals. We
had always been taught that this kind of thing was the
brutal act of repressive dictatorships. This sort of
undertaking was called "the Purges", "show trials",
these were the actions of immoral brutes. Not freedom
in a democratic state. But this happened before my
eyes -- not on television -- in my home town -- not in
a country I'd never heard of -- when I was ten.
In sum, we were scared. Everyone was scared, it didn't
matter if you were French or English or Nationalist or
Federalist, or even if you didn't care. One invisible
army was striking randomly, and another very visible
army was marching around pointing guns at everyone who
sneezed.
TDR: "Black Bird" does a wonderful job of showing the
beauty and many contradictions of Montréal. Can you
describe what Montréal was like when you were a child.
Has the city changed much since then? What prompted
your move to Toronto?
Thanks for the compliment. It's really a lesson; I
tried very hard to leave description out of the novel.
One of my complaints about Canadian fiction is that
it's too descriptive, too many authors waste way too
much time telling you every last detail. Who cares?
All this time is spent describing how characters look
and dress, and readers completely ignore it. Or much
is made of the landscape, as if we can't just look out
our windows and see what the world looks like for
ourselves. To me it's a sign of a lack of story, a
lack of viewpoint. It's flabby and irrelevant. There
are other mediums that do documentary much better,
like film and photography, even television. It's true,
you know, one picture being worth a thousand words.
Use your thousand words to do something else,
something film can't do. I pared as much as I could
away from Black Bird, to get down to the essentials.
And in the end everyone tells me they can see the city
in the book, that it comes across right.
I grew up in Montreal's golden period. It was the
largest and most important city in Canada, the Habs
owned the Stanley Cup, Drapeau was mayor, Levesque was
premier, Trudeau prime minister. We had the Quiet
Revolution, Expo 67, Canada's first major league
baseball team, the October Crisis, the PQ was elected,
the Olympics came to town, a referendum was held. It
goes on and on. Physically it's changed somewhat. The
neighbourhood I grew up in was either bulldozed or
gentrified, there's a lot more modern development.
When I was a kid you could always get parking on major
streets, you'd just pull up to the door. The spirit's
different, though, too. Montreal's been through a lot
of strife and hard times, yet the bitterness is
virtually gone and the lifestyle has not only been
preserved, it's been enhanced. Quebecers more than any
other Canadians were made aware of the importance of
their cultural identity, and it's so strong now it's
hard to believe it was under threat back then. The
result is a marvelous, unique place where life is
really lived, not simply endured or conquered.
My wife and I are both in the arts and working in
English. We first moved to Toronto when Montreal was
really at a low point economically - it was awful,
most of downtown was boarded up. So we came here like
everyone does, for work. Like it or not, Toronto is
the center of English Canadian culture. It made sense
for me to come here, and it paid off. It was a hard
adjustment for me, but in the end I like Toronto a
lot, and one thing it gave me is the understanding of
what it means to be a Montrealer. The distance and the
difference really underlines the separate identities
of both cities.
TDR: While reading your novel, I noticed that you used
actual streets names in Montréal. Do you think that
using obvious landmarks and street names allowed for
native Montrealers, and those familiar with the area,
to further connect with the family Desouches?
It wasn't so much the characters I was worried about,
it was the fantastic or outrageous events. I felt I
had to ground everything in reality to make the
distortions acceptable. I was worried that what I was
doing was against the accepted Canadian traditions of
realism and naturalism, so I worked hard to make the
setting, the social background and the characters are
real as possible. For me this amounted to catching
myself whenever I was "writing" -- by which I mean
putting something on paper because that's how it's
done, or because the story wanted it. In bad books and
films you see characters doing things because there's
a strategic need in plot terms or thematic terms, but
not because it's "in character" or realistic. That's
cheating, it's bad writing. There's a scene in Woody
Allen's Bullets Over Broadway that explains this very
succinctly. They're rehearsing the play onstage, and
the gangster watching from the seats complains,
"People don't talk like that."
TDR: What can we expect to see next from you? Are you
doing more writing than reading these days?
I've started another novel, but I'm not in a hurry. I
notice a lot of writers bring out a second book much
too quickly. It's a great temptation but my success
came from taking my time. Otherwise I'm doing a lot of
book reviewing, so I'm reading a lot. I'm trying to
stick closely to what interests me or what I need to
read, so in effect I'm getting people to pay for my
reading time. Reading is a huge part of writing, its
part of the job. I want to be paid for it. Plus I
beleive writers should review books. There's a great
lack of this aspect of the community in Canada.
Writing is not such a solitary act as so many people
claim. We feed off each other, we write in response to
each other - and we need each other's professional
opinion on what we're doing. We're too shy of
offending each other, of losing work or friends. We
need to treat each other like scientists or
philosophers do - debate, argue. Writing is a
discourse, it's not just some egocentric personal
expression or disconnected and disposable time-killing
entertainment. Again, that's what television is.
Writers in Canada need to risk confrontation and risk
failure. Athletes do this all the time. You go out,
you fumble. It's part of the game. Sometimes you get
tackled. It hurts, but you heal. Besides, you got
published, what does it matter if the reviews are bad?
You started with the ultimate good review -
professional acceptance.
TDR: What authors and individuals have influenced you
over the years?
How much time have you got?
TDR: Finally, have you had to shelve your own book yet?
I moved it to a prominent display area and make sure
it's fully stocked all the time. If there were still
an Oprah table, I'd sneak it on there. All my
co-workers keep encouraging me to hand-sell it, but I
can't do that. It's there, let people make up their
own mind. You can't force readers, you can only make
sure they notice you. My years as a bookseller have
given me a kind of knowledge about the business and
about readers that many writers lack. I've seen so
many books come and go and I see the patterns in
sales, and I see what helps and what hinders. A book
has a brief window of sales and then it's over. You
can hope for a resurgence, say when the paperback
comes or if lightning strikes and you win some prize,
but basically you've got two or three months to do any
business. Then you've got to look for a job again.
Considering this, it's astonishing how many writers
refuse to do publicity, or do it so grudgingly they're
actually hurting themselves. I'm telling you, there's
an amazing number of writers out there cutting their
own throats because they're so out of touch or
self-important. Danielle
Couture is a Toronto-based poet and staff writer
with The Danforth Review. |