TDR
Fall 2008 Preview
Compiled by Katelynn Schoop
FICTION
A comic novel about AIDS, The Steve Machine by Mike
Hoolboom (Coach House, Oct), centers on Auden, fraught with identity
crisis and HIV positive, hiding in the streets of Toronto and surrounded
by eccentricities named things like Wrik and Orlan. In true experimental
fiction form, content echoes theme, with the novel functioning as do the
art-machines its title character creates. In any case, this out of
context quotation does more for the book than a summary ever could:
"I love this book" (The real-life Steve Reinke). The prolific
and always witty Jim Harrison releases The English Major (Anansi,
Sept), the story of a man’s identity crisis, subsequent solo road trip
across America, and noble but (maybe) futile journey to rename all the
states and state birds – maybe the narrator can team up with Sufjan
Stevens, and at least knock Michigan and Illinois off the list as having
been creatively repurposed. Award-winning poet, novelist, and essayist David
Manicom’s novel Anna’s Shadow (Véhicule, Sept) takes a
look at terrorism and love worldwide while Giller-nominated novelist and
cultural critic Neil Bissoondath releases The Soul of All
Great Designs (Cormorant).
Cockroach,
Giller nominee Rawi Hage’s follow up to the
wildly-praised-and-acclaimed De Niro’s Game, is set in Montreal
and follows an outcast thief who can’t even commit suicide properly.
Hilarious! The narrative moves through the thief’s dark past and the
dark present of Montreal at night, resulting in a sharply-defined look
at society’s outcasts. In his latest novel, Jonathan Bennett
(winner of the 2008 K.M. Hunter Artists' Award in Literature) explores
the destructive influence of power and privilege in the aptly-titled Entitlement
(ECW, Oct) while Toronto author Derek McCormack is back with his
much-anticipated vampirical fashion freak show novel The Show That
Smells (ECW, Oct) which will also be published in the states by
Akashic in early 2009.
Valmiki’s Daughter, by
Shani Mootoo (Anansi, Sept) is described in the catalogue as – among
other things – juicy, sexy, and beautiful. Sold. The novel sees Mootoo
tackling themes (themes that admittedly need repetitive tackling) from
her earlier work, addressing the tensions between race, class, and
sexuality through the heartfelt lens of family. DC Books’ new Punchy
Writers Series imprint releases Eva Moran’s Porny Stories
(DC Books) which, undoubtedly, has an extremely intriguing title. Set in
Toronto, the stories focus on female protagonists the catalogue
identifies as Woody Allen-esque. And really, who doesn’t love a little
neuroticism? Moran’s intimate and first-hand style of narration makes
the bad boyfriends and poor decisions especially funny and relatable.
Poet Michael Blouin re-imagines the broken family in Chase and
Haven (Coach House, Oct), a novel blending together impressionist
vignettes into narrative. Weighted character names such as Chase, Haven,
and April point to a care and deliberate craft that ensures this
"haunting story of suffering and love" will be worthy of a
read.
NON-FICTION
She doesn’t really need an introduction, so it’s
suffice to say that Margaret Atwood is publishing another book.
This time around it’s non-fiction, in Payback: Debt and the Shadow
Side of Wealth (Anansi, Oct), an inventive look at the ways in which
debt functions to structure social relationships and our understanding
of the human imagination. Part of the CBC Massey Lecture series, the
book doesn’t promise to help you with your actual debt (see Oprah
instead), but it will likely rock your world in the abstract. October
will also see the release of another Massey Lectures title, More Lost
Massey Lectures (Anansi, Oct), featuring pieces from some big names
including Claude Lévi-Strauss.
Mary Soderstrom’s The
Walkable City (Véhicule, Sept) thoroughly examines the relationship
between city organization and the citizen – offering a much-needed
substitute for all those urban planning articles in the Toronto Star.
Soderstrom’s interest ranges from Paris to North Vancouver and
Singapore, ensuring a well-rounded argument for pedestrians, beyond the
price of gas (have you seen the price of gas lately?). Likewise, Tim
Lilburn’s Going Home: Essays (Anansi, Sept) explores the
impact of land on individual lives through essays ranging from the
intellectual to the personal. Comic memoir The 30 Second Commute: The
Perks and Perils of Being a Freelance Writer (ECW, Nov) by Stephanie
Dickison is about, well, the perks and perils of freelance writing,
detailing the highs, lows, and free stuff. The secret lives of writers
are exposed again in Closer to Home: The Author and the Author
Portrait (Véhicule, Sept), a photography collection by Terence
Byrnes that includes a brief history of the author portrait, photos
of authors in habitat, and literary gossip.
POETRY
Award-winner Margaret Christakos releases What
Stirs (Coach House, Oct), a playful collection exploring the
postmodern dilemma of attachment in the digital age. The work toys with
the problem of virtual identity, and ways in which the distance we
create between our selves and the selves we represent can explicitly
expose vulnerability. In Penny Dreadful (Véhicule, Sept),
Vancouver poet Shannon Stewart takes on sexuality, taboos, and
the story of Robert Pickton, all without compromise. Also from
the Punchy Writers Series, Unisex Love Poems (DC Books) by Angela
Szczepaniak piece together recipes, etiquette, love letters, and the
law into a "verse-novel" that engages the mind and heart
equally. Plus, there are very tiny lawyers and diagrams of human
anatomy. You just cannot go wrong here. The Laundromat Essay
(Coach House, Oct), a debut collection by Kyle Buckley, plays
with its narrator’s perception of memory and space while its form
simultaneously runs rampant, creating a unique and innovative reading
experience.
Biblical allegory runs wild in Adam Sol’s Jeremiah,
Ohio (Anansi, Sept), a narrative poem constructed as dialogue
between two diametrically opposed characters – demonstrating Sol’s
dexterity with language and tone. The Bible gets toyed with again, this
time by Robert Priest in Reading the Bible Backwards (ECW,
Oct), a collection of cultural narratives reversed in the name of
sharp-witted cultural satire.
Katelynn Schoop is TDR's editorial assistant and intern. |