The
Next Rainy Day
by Philip David Alexander
Dundurn Press, 2005
Reviewed by Michael Bryson
Philip David Alexander's debut novel,
The
Next Rainy Day, includes five deaths, and each plays a prominent
role in the plot. The novel, however, is not a murder mystery. Death is
not even the dominant element of this restrained character study,
despite its prevalence. If this novel has a thematic core, that theme is
male anger. The psychologists tell us that grief has four stages:
denial, anger, depression, and reintegration. A return to health
following grief typically requires passing through all of these stages.
To pause, to get stuck – say in the anger stage – can have negative
consequences. For oneself. For others.
On the surface, The Next Rainy Day
is a novel about the death of a child. A ten-year-old boy walks to
school alone on a cold, rainy, icy day. A car skids. The boy dies. The
novel is told in two voices, representing the perspectives of the father
of the child, who happens to be a policeman, and the father of the youth
who was behind the wheel of the vehicle. The death of the child is the
incident that connects (or, more accurately, disconnects) the two
families.
The story of the father of the driver,
Bert Commerford, is told in the first-person. The story of the policeman
is told in the third-person. These last points may seem overly
technical; however, the author’s choice to unfold the story in this
way is significant. The first-person voice draws the reader closer to
Commerford, while the third-person voice creates distance and a buffer
of "objectivity" around the policeman’s point of view. The
difference is subtle, as is the significance of this choice, as the
novel proceeds to its climax and conclusion.
Which this review will not give away.
Except to repeat that there is more to this novel than plot, and that
the meaning of events, while it may appear obvious, is often anything
but.
The Next Rainy Day
is a strong debut from Alexander, whose work has appeared in literary
journals such as Front & Centre, The Circle Magazine, and
Storyglossia. As mentioned above,
this is a book with a male-focused narrative. How men deal with trauma;
how men seek to resolve troubled emotions; how men attempt to find
meaning in emotional ambiguity. Paraphrase any of these points and you
are near the core of this novel. The Next Rainy Day could have
come from the pen of Russell Banks. Think The Sweet Hereafter.
Think Affliction. These are not easy books with simple plotlines
or quick moral resolution. The Next Rainy Day isn’t either.
Michael Bryson is the editor of The
Danforth Review. |