TDR
Interview: Claudia Dey
Part of TDR's feature on Toronto
Books: Spring 2008
Claudia
Dey began working on Stunt
(Coach House, 2008) during the summer of 2003. The process began “as a
series of notes scrawled in a notebook. The notebooks accumulated. They
were transcribed and distilled over many, many hours.”
Claudia Dey’s plays have been translated
into French and German, and produced internationally Claudia writes the
“Group Therapy” column for the Globe and Mail. Stunt
is her first novel.
For a complete rundown of all things
Claudia, visit her website: claudiadey.com
*
On your bicycle, we are flying.
In my sock feet and nightgown, I stand up on your handlebars, the prow
of a ship heading into the great unknown, and I climb onto your
mile-wide shoulders, can see the next continent ... You catch the
moon, always heavy in your mouth. You tell me it tastes like ice and
regret. You tell me it tastes like liftoff. – excerpt from Stunt
Eugenia Ledoux, nine years old, wakes
to a note from her father: ‘gone to save the world. sorry. yours, sheb
wooly ledoux. asshole.’ Eugenia is left behind with her mother, the
sharp-edged B-movie actress Mink, and her sister, the death-obsessed and
hauntingly beautiful Immaculata. When Mink climbs into the family car
and vanishes, Eugenia doubles in age overnight, but remains the dark and
diminutive creature who earned the nickname ‘Stunt.’
Eugenia devotes herself to finding Sheb. She writes to the man she
believes to be Sheb’s father: I.I. Finbar Me The Three, a retired
tightrope walker. Waiting for Finbar’s response, she retreats to
Toronto Island, where she meets Samuel Station, a barefoot voluptuary,
world traveller and ring-maker.
When Finbar does write back, Eugenia
wonders if she will find what she is looking for – or something else
entirely. Studded with postcards from outer space, twins, levitation,
the explosion of a shoulder-pad factory, and some accomplished
taxidermy, Stunt is part dirge, part cowboy poetry and part love
letter to the wilder corners of Toronto and of ourselves.
(Interview by Nathaniel G. Moore -
March 2008)
*
TDR: What inspired you to have the characters venture over to
Toronto Island?
CD: If the city of Toronto was a brain, the island
would be its wildest thought. I lived on Toronto Island for various
periods throughout the writing of the book. I found the island culture
to be its own peculiar, dream-like construction. we do not wake up in
the city to a horse or a parade of children on stilts walking by. I
needed a setting that was fit for daring (and some apocalyptic
underwater sex.)
TDR: People enjoy knowing where things are set. People like
these tidbits, they tuck them into their subconscious. Are you compelled
to set your work in a specific geographic region?
CD: Absolutely. I think geography is crucial to story.
A place has its own exigencies, its own urgencies, its own idiom. the
heroine of 'stunt', Eugenia Ledoux travels from Parkdale to Toronto
island to the ghostly grounds of the Guild Inn in Scarborough. Even
though her migration east is only a matter of miles, these places are
entire, other worlds for Eugenia. she has never travelled. I am
fascinated by how we re-construct our identity when all of the obvious
markers are gone. Writing this book, i was re-introduced to the city.
Catch Claudia and the Coach House gang at the following events:
Coach House Toronto Spring 2008 Launch
featuring Maggie Helwig, Claudia Dey, RM Vaughan,
Jen Currin and Jordan Scott
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Stones Place, 1255 Queen Street West
Toronto, ON
7:30 p.m.
Free
Coach House Montreal Spring
2008 Launch
featuring Maggie Helwig, Claudia Dey, RM Vaughan, Jen Currin,
Jordan Scott and Sachiko Murakami
Sunday, April 13, 2008
The Green Room, 5386 St-Laurent
Toronto, ON
8:00 p.m.
Free
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