The Life and Times of Captain N.
by Douglas Glover
Goose Lane Editions, 2001 (first published by McClelland &
Stewart, 1993)
Reviewed by Michael Bryson
Early last fall, TDR ran an
interview with Douglas Glover. This review was meant to accompany
that interview. However, it didn't get written until many weeks later.
Life intervened (as life does), but something else happened, too. A kind
of writer's block. Something closely related to fear. Fear of what? Fear
of failure, yes. Fear of forgetting, also. Fear of forgetting something
important. Fear of failing to say the right thing. Fear of not
"getting it right."
More than perhaps any other, this is a review I wanted
to "get right". In the end, I didn't get it done. And now I
can only offer notes towards the review that should have been, but never
was.
In short, I think this is more than a fine book. It is
one of those books that sent a shock down my spinal cord. Readers should
always approach books with high expectations, even though that usually
means we are disappointed. Less often we are merely satisfied. Rarer
still, we can say we read a book that startled and shocked us. This is
the experience I had with The Life and Times of Captain N. I
believe it is a rare book in the Canadian canon - and deserves a much
higher profile that it currently commands.
Writers are often asked about influences. My thought
is you find your influences through diverse reading. More specifically,
the linear progression commonly implied when writers are asked about
influences is misleading at best, and at worse, false. Your influences
are the writers you are attracted you; they are your family of origin,
even though you may not find them until you are well on your way to
developing your own outlook on life - and your own literary
"voice".
Such was my experience when I read Glover's essay in
"The Masks of I" in The
New Quarterly in 1999 (reprinted that same year in Glover's
nonfiction collection Notes Home from a Prodigal Son, Oberon
Press). Glover said things I had been struggling to articulate for my
own. He referenced other works I had found important. And he used The
Life and Times of Captain N. as an example:
The following is an example of precisely this kind
of Procrustean pseudo-Jamesian criticism taken from a review of my own
novel The Life and Times of Captain N. (my God, Percy! - four
points of view, two of them the same person only years apart,
interpolated essays on history and anthropology, dream images
traveling back and forth between characters - absolute bloody chaos!).
What is "Procrustean pseudo-Jamesian
criticism"? According to Glover, it's the kind practice by literary
critics who hold that the novel ought to reflect a singular point of
view, as articulated by Percy Lubbock in 1921 in a volume called The
Craft of Fiction. As Glover notes (and as Glover practices), there
is another school of thought that celebrates novels with multiple points
of view, as articulated by E.M. Forster in 1927 in Aspects of the
Novel. Milan Kundera's The Art of the Novel is a later
proponent of this school, as is the work of the Russian linguist Mikhail
Bakhtin.
In an earlier
editorial in The Danforth Review I made reference to Glover's
TNQ essay. At the time (March
2000), I was ticked off by a review Andrew Pyper had written about
Michael Turner's The Pornographer's Poem in The Globe and Mail.
To use Glover's terms, I saw Pyper as a "Procrustean pseudo-Jamesian":
For Pyper, reading experimental prose is
like a "wrestling match between 'straight story' and 'pure
idea'." Pyper's use of the term "narrative pleasure" is a
hint about the assumptions he brings to reviewing (and his own fiction,
like the recent popular novel, Lost Girls). Another hint is the
false conflict he sets up between "story" and
"idea". Contrary to the assumption in Pyper's argument,
stories and ideas are rarely, if ever, separated. Stories have been
embodying ideas for millennia. In fact, it could easily be said the
stories with the deepest ideas are the ones that survive the sands of
time, while "narrative pleasure" reeks of Hollywood
blockbusters, special effects, manipulative music scores, and plotting
rigged to trigger the heartstrings of the sentimental.
Well, whatever. All of this is a lead up to
say that making a case for raising the profile of The Life and Times of
Captain N. also requires the promotion of a way of reading that is
outside of the mainstream. Glover makes the case firmly in "The Masks
of I". I won't make it again here - only reaffirm it. The Life and
Times of Captain N. does represent four points of view, but it is not
"absolute bloody chaos!"
What about the story? Here's an outline:
The setting is the back country of upstate New York at the end of the
American Revolution. War is raging, and Glover presents a multi-sided
narrative that takes inside the hearts and minds of many of the players.
One of the dominant players is Oskar Nellis, a young man who writes
admiring letters to George Washington, but who is kidnapped by his father
and forced to fight for King George's army. Oskar lives into old age, and
the narrative includes parts of his "Book on Indians." Through
Oskar, readers see snapshots of the multiple conflicts of that age (and
ours?).
This is the point where I wish I had more
to say, but I can only point to the book. Go there; find out for yourself.
If you are a reader of literary books, please do yourself a favour and
read this one. It ought to be a touchstone for a new generation of
Canadian readers - and writers. Share the wealth. Pass it on.
Michael Bryson is the
Publisher/Editor of The Danforth Review.
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