Airstream
by Patricia Young
Biblioasis, 2005
Reviewed by Anne Borden
This is the first collection of short stories by
Young, an established poet based in Victoria. A winner
of the British Columbia Book Prize for Poetry and
nominee for the Governor General's Award, Young adapts
well to the prose form. She brings a poet's
sensibility to the task, richly developing the inner
worlds of her characters and often taking a non-linear
approach to her storytelling.
I started Airstream as subway reading, but missed my
stop (Spadina) and ended up at St. Andrew because I
was so drawn into "Girl of the Week." (At least I had a
good story as an excuse for being late.) "Girl
of the Week," like several other pieces, is a
suspenseful character study that deals with moral
dilemmas that are outside of the usual fray. In it,
Jean Marie Waterman keeps an almost unbearable secret
from her bff, while negotiating the rough social
terrain of class struggle in grade six. The strength
of this piece, and others such as "Dumb Fish" and "Hitchhike" is in Young’s ability to imbue minor
characters with substance. Her minor characters are
few, and they are never simply foils, punchlines or
wallpaper.
Young’s stories are often both startling and
thrilling, much like a good ballad. She scratches a
deep groove into the consciousness of her characters,
and allows them to tell their side of the story
without authorial nattering. Young wisely chooses the
first person to delve into material such as divorce,
infidelity and mourning. She has a good ear for
dialogue, and like many writers has clearly listened
to a lot of people tell their stories. Introducing the
15-year-old Jayne, in Hitchhiker, she writes:
People like to talk. About themselves mainly but about
other things too. And Jayne is genuinely interested.
She believes every story is fascinating, every person
has a story to tell. And she has a way of drawing them
out. For a brief time the driver forgets he’s forty
and balding, forgets it’s Tuesday morning and he’s
going to spend much of his life in an airless cubical
drinking bad coffee. Last night his daughter ate all
the play-dough and wet her bed, but these details
dissipate in the blast of damp air Jayne brings in
from outside. Suddenly there she is in her high boots
and lip gloss asking who what why. …
If asked, she’d have to say that men are easier to
talk to than women. Men, it seems, are willing to
believe she has momentarily fallen in love with them.
For a poet, the transition to prose can be rocky, and
Airstream hits a few bumps along the way. Perhaps
because Young's writing is so textured, it is
especially jarring to be interrupted in the midst of a
great description with a flashback or flashforward
that can turn the experience of reading a short story
into a puzzle-solving session. Working out these
temporal issues is a distraction from these otherwise
solid tales.
Overall, Airstream is a bold and exciting collection
from a poet who has successfully found her legs in the
prose world. Evocatively packaged by Biblioasis, the
collection makes for excellent reading either in short
spurts or in a couple of long draws. Don't read it on
the subway, though. You might miss your stop.
Anne Borden is a writer living in Toronto.
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ISSN 1494-6114.
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