Family Resemblances
by Anne Cameron
Harbour Publishing, 2003
Reviewed by Marcie McCauley
Beginning
to read Anne Cameron’s Family Resemblances is like
walking into a roomful of people who are strangers to you: names and
faces blur and you are convinced that they all know each other better
than you will ever know any one of them. Just sit down at the kitchen
table with a hot drink and listen to your host, allow the author’s
voice to acquaint you with the group and quietly observe the surrouding
connections and resemblances.
The first chapter of Family
Resemblances introduces so many characters that you might wish for a
family tree for reference, but "family" in Cameron-speak is
more fluid than its dictionary definition. This isn’t surprising from
Anne Cameron, who dedicated her 1990 novel Escape to Beulah as
follows: "For my kids, biological-adopted-foster-extended and step
… if we had any more races we’d have to call this a track meet
instead of a family." The dedication also reveals humour and heart,
two qualities in abundance in this writer’s work.
Readers familiar with Anne Cameron’s
earlier novels, like A Whole Brass Band, The Whole Fam Damily and
Aftermath, will immediately feel at home. Family Resemblances
is written in the same informal style, with realistic dialogue and sharp
characterization infused with wry humour, passion and anger that is
fuelled by injustice. And as with these earlier works, the reader is
very quickly involved in the story and engrossed in the characters’
lives.
The novel opens with Cedar Campbell’s
memory of riding on a swing: "up and up, larger, farther, down and
down, smaller, closer, up up back and up, larger, then down, forward and
down, the world shrinking again." This would also be an apt
description of Anne Cameron’s storytelling: the perspective tightens
and loosens within and between chapters so that in barely three hundred
pages, Cedar moves from conception to mid-life through some scenes drawn
in fine detail from her childhood and other broad-stroked sketches of
her great-grandparents and neighbours’ experiences.
In the prelude to her 1999 novel Aftermath,
the author writes: "For me life has seemed to be a collection of
spirals, each leading into another, some off-kilter, some others more or
less eccentric, and still others becoming dead ends, trailing off by
themselves." This philosophy is mirrored in the structure of her
prose but that’s an organic process rather than a conscious choice
according to the prelude to her 1991 novel Kick the Can where she
explains that "stories give birth to themselves, they choose their
own length, their own style, and sometimes it feels as if they write
themselves".
Although clearly aware of the
importance and abundance of magic and mystery in the world, Anne Cameron’s
Family Resemblances is firmly rooted in the everyday. At
thirty-one years old, Cedar’s mother Kate feels as though she’s
fifty:
She wasn’t even Catholic and here
she was, as good as a nun, Sister Mary Dreary ‘n’ Grim, rising
in the morning, making sure the kids had eaten and dressed
themselves properly, hugging them and sending them off to the school
bus, then helping Karen with the housework, sometimes managing a
short nap before it was time to get ready and ride to Mom’s
[Restaurant] and work until closing time feeding people. And then
after Mom’s she came home to a horse that was dark except for the
one light still on in the kitchen. She would make a pot of tea, sit
with her feet up on a second chair and read the evening newspaper
Olaf always set out for her.
There is a lot of detail in this novel
about everyday routines, from waitressing to hog-farming, from mothering
to truck-driving, and readers who believe the ordinary can be
extraordinary will appreciate the author’s attentiveness. With careful
reading of Cedar’s first day at the gravel pit, you might feel as
though you’ve been through the training session yourself. Behind the
wheel, in kitchens and gardens, visiting animal shelters and hospital
rooms: the scenes in Anne Cameron’s novels are vibrant and realistic.
An important element of this writer’s
work is the setting on the West Coast of Canada, the vitally important
role played by its geography and the communities therein. Anne Cameron
writes in the preface to her 1989 collection Women, Kids and
Huckleberry Wine:
A town is not streets and
sidewalks, buildings and roads, sewer systems and industry; a town
is made by the people who live in it, people who are formed by the
power of their geography, people who adapt to or alter their
surroundings, are adapted or altered by them. What can ever be said
of a town without focusing on the people who live in it?
From within the details of everyday
life, the characters in Anne Cameron’s novels grapple with
fundamentally important questions in the wake of domestic violence,
rape, death, accidents and apathy. They test the boundaries they find
and stretch the common definitions of home, kinship and sexuality.
Often the women in Anne Cameron’s
novels were warned against trouble as girls, as Ceileigh’s grandmother
warned in the author’s 1989 novel, South of an Unnamed Creek:
"No matter how nice it looks, make sure there’s a way out of it,
make sure you can look after your every need yourself". Young girls
like Ceileigh in this early novel and Cedar in the author’s latest
novel are tough and smart because circumstances demand that they be so.
"Funny how that worked out,
eh?" Cedar asks near the end of the novel. Her brother studies a
model skeleton in a doctor’s office and speculates on the location of
the soul; he expects it would be "either in or very near your
heart" and readers who connect with Anne Cameron’s spiral-styled
storytelling might expect to find her books there too. Reading them
might make you want to pour yourself another cup and keep turning the
pages; it might make you sorry it’s not a bottomless pot.
Marcie McCauley |