The Good Body
by Bill Gaston
Cormorant/Stoddart, 2000
Reviewed by Harold Hoefle
It’s Saturday night and, well, there’s snow everywhere and you
don’t have the energy to check out a film or go to a bar or even just
visit a friend, so you turn on the t.v. and catch a hockey game in
mid-period. There’s been a fight, two guys are screaming, and though
you’re not a trained linguist or lip-reader, you can see that a
certain f-word is occasionally used. But what, exactly, are these
athletes saying? The Good Body, Bill Gaston’s new novel, gives
you some clues: "Fuckin’ stick your fuckin’ eyes out, fuckin’
chop your head off, fuckin’ shit down your fuckin’ neck,
fuckin’ kill ya, I’ll fuckin’ kill ya, I’ll
fuckin’ FUCK ya."
Wonderfully alliterative, that, and note the absence of exclamation
marks; Graham Greene, who called them exaggeration marks, would have
approved. But this is the point: the hero of Gaston’s novel is
ostensibly hockey-player Bobby Bonaduce, a man who returns to
Fredericton and the son he abandoned twenty years ago, and who wants to
win back his son’s love. Bonaduce is our man. We spend almost
three-hundred pages in his company after he registers in the M.A.
English Literature program at the University of New Brunswick, and then
tries out for the school’s hockey team – which his son now plays
for. The odds are stacked CN Tower-high against
"hand-to-mouth" Bonaduce, and we want him to win. Yet the hero
of Gaston’s novel is arguably language, and especially colloquial
language, the protean charms of the stuff we shout and whisper and
deadpan to each other every day of our lives. And in Gaston’s novel,
the words that tumble our way are Bonaduce’s, words lifted from his
thoughts by an unseen narrator and served in an almost
stream-of-consciousness manner, the stops and starts and glides like a
hockey player’s skate from one end of the rink to the other. Hockey,
language, life: each force takes and resonates the other in The Good
Body, and Bonaduce is the conduit.
Here he is, standing outside in the New Brunswick night, thinking
about the wife he also left twenty years ago: "Loud stars. Hungry
stars. Synaesthesia, grad-student word for the day. This jazzy
darkness. Your citrus heart. Sweet and sour Leah." And elsewhere,
another sky-gazing moment: "The full moon up there, frozen pearl
bouncing at my shoulder." Not just demotic diction, this; Gaston
writes a Canadian demotic, using words that conjure up coldness
and beauty and physicality, the bouncing moon just as easily a puck
swiped at in front of a net by men, men capable of both violence and
graceful speed.
The scarred man who returns home after battling abroad: Bonaduce is
in the tradition of Homer’s Odysseus, of William Kennedy’s Francis
Phelan in Ironweed, of David Adams Richards’ Jerry Bines in For
Those Who Hunt the Wounded Down. Like Phelan and Bines, Bonaduce
feels he must atone, must come to understand his flight and explain it
to his son and ex-wife and, most importantly, himself. He must square
his love for "the fresh start with nothing" with
responsibility to those he believes he loves; he must grow up. For
Bonaduce is the forty-year-old who can play guitar, install drywall,
last two minutes in an NHL game, cook, wax eloquent on Canadian
literature, and write decent first-drafts of a novel – but can he be
an adult? Early in the novel he reflects on his son: "there was so
much to find out about Jason, so much of it so basic. The ever-kindling
guilt of the wayward Bonaduce." Gaston’s novel is, among many
others things, a confessional tale.
Look at his name, Bobby Bonaduce: he sounds like a child. And
as his room-mate Margaret observes, he had "a sort of restless On
the Road feel to him – he was a fifties guy." Yes, Bonaduce
as a Beat-generation gadabout, a protracted adolescent, a man who goes
through girlfriends – Kerouac said that pretty girls make graves –
as he careers through, well, what? In Bonaduce’s case, twenty years of
professional hockey, the job that took him out of Fredericton and the
lives of his two beloveds. Now, as Gaston’s novel opens, he is again
barrelling seventy-miles-an-hour down the open road and singing and
making plans and exploding with possibilities and dreams – this time,
however, Bobby Bonaduce is driving home.
Bill Gaston’s twin heroes of language and man-as-jock-belletrist
stayed with this reader for days after he finished the novel. Bonaduce
endears. And Gaston endures: A Good Body is his fourth novel.
Gaston has also published three collections of short fiction and a
volume of verse; he’s had two plays performed; he’s written a
screenplay (The New Brunswicker); and he recently won the
Canadian Literary Award for Short Fiction. A Good Body could be
the first Canadian novel that successfully excavates three different
worlds – hockey, academe, and the broken family – and uses as its
shovel a resilient humility. Thinking about his fellow grad students and
the profs they shared, Bonaduce says to himself: "But hey, he’d
show them: he could be stupid in ways they’d never dreamed of."
Harold Hoefle teaches high school English in
Montreal. He has published fiction and book reviews.