So Misguided

Plain words, uncommon sense

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Indians on Vacation by Thomas King | Book Review

A quietly witty book about marriage and travel.

Indians on Vacation follows Bird and Mimi through the streets of Prague where they look for signs of Mimi’s Uncle Leroy, who decades ago sent postcards to the family from around the world.

Mimi loves to travel. For her, it’s an adventure. And she is never arm’s length from her travel guidebook. Bird likes his creature comforts, and travel isn’t comfortable. The room is hot. The train trip too long. The river is no better than the one at home. He has quite the share of personality quirks, and his “demons” natter at him throughout the trip. If you’ve travelled, you know this couple–you might even be this couple 😉

The pair’s wanderings through Prague bring up chatter and memories of past trips, of how they met, of home, of that sense of belonging, family and identity. It’s a simple plot that unfolds a complex history.

I enjoyed the subtly of this novel. The small jabs at tourists, the need to see things other people have seen, to buy the thing or memento. There are funny moments mixed with poignant insights, and overall it’s an enjoyable read.

Here’s a representative quote: “I’m sweaty and sticky. My ears are still popping from the descent into Vaclav Havel. My sinuses ache. My stomach is upset. My mouth is a sewer. I roll over and bury my face in a pillow. Mimi snuggles down beside me with no regard for my distress.

‘My god,’ she whispers, ‘can it get any better?'”

Indians on Vacation is perfect for fans of Canadian Literature (Thomas King is an icon). If you enjoyed Less by Andrew Sean Greer, you’ll probably enjoy this too.

And if awards are important, this book kicked butt:

CBC Books: Best Canadian Fiction of 2020

Globe & Mail 100: Our Favourite Books of 2020

Indigo Best Books of the Year

Scotiabank Giller Prize, Canada

Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize

The Pull of the Stars by Emma Donoghue | Book Review

A chilling read about 3 days in a maternity ward at the height of the great flu (1918).

Emma Donoghue is acclaimed author of Room, which I never read. But her writing prowess is well known and I was looking forward to reading this novel set in Ireland in 1918.

Description: Nurse Julia Power finds herself on duty (alone) in the maternity ward. It’s the height of the great flu. Beds are full. She’s managing 3 women, in basically a broom cupboard, and begs for some help. She is left with Bridie Sweeney, who has basically been pulled off the street by a nun and told to help. Thankfully Bridie is a quick learner, and she and Julie become fast friends during a hectic 3-day period where they lose patients, help others birth their babies, and somehow manage to help the only female doctor evade police.

The characters and setting are vividly portrayed and I heard Emma Donoghue interviewed on CBC talking about the research she did into medical practices in Ireland at the time. Fascinating. And frightening.

In 1918, Ireland is post-war but the tragedy is still felt and now the flu is another heart-wrenching reminder of how quickly loved ones can be lost. The women giving birth and attending are so young. Nurse Power is the senior at 30 years old.

I really enjoyed this read.

Favourite Moment: There are many touching moments in this book and I fear that by mentioning any details, I’ll ruin it for someone. So instead, the book opens with Nurse Power pedalling her bicycle to the hospital but taking side routes and the tram as a way to evade the scolding eyes of her superiors who frown on women cyclists. Ah, what a time.

The perfect read for fans of Emma Donoghue and anyone who watches Call the Midwife. If you like Emily St. John Mandel (Station Eleven) or Jeannette Walls (The Glass Castle) then this is kind of between the two. Pandemic meets family hardships, with a hint of humour and levity.

The Certainties by Aislinn Hunter

The Certainties by Aislinn Hunter

A beautiful novel about the in-between places.

The Certainties follows two different people in two different times, whose lives intersect briefly in 1940. The man, our main narrator, is a road-weary traveller who is fleeing Paris. The war is looming, people are disappearing, he has already been held in a volunteer work camp and been released, and now he is sneaking into Spain with two friends.

At a small village cafe, he briefly meets a little girl named Pia.

His story unfolds over a treacherous 48-hour period where his life is held in flux by the police and visiting German officials. Pia’s life is a flash-forward to the 1980s. She’s living on a remote island in the Atlantic, working in the kitchen of an inn, and having a casual romance with a local builder. There is a wedding, a storm, and a shipwreck. Bit of people’s lives wash ashore while life carries on. The juxtaposition of some of the scenes is masterful.

What we learn about the man is that he’s a German intellectual, living large in Paris, cavorting with various philosophers and artists. Two of these connections are his current travelling companions. I can’t really say he was “living life.” He’s a bit of a downer and is told so by his sister. On the run, he does brave things and stupid things. And either way, the trap is laid, and he knows it.

There are beautiful passages about bridges and mirrors, all part of his thesis and work. He reflects on the various interpretations of Narcissus. Our narrator is self-absorbed, but he teaches us that the Narcissus story is much more nuanced.

Bridges and mirrors — what it means for two sides to be connected, reflected…

Pia is also on the run, but only from herself. Her mother, a journalist, disappeared when Pia was young. She has moved around from job to job, never setting down roots. She can pack up her room at the inn in 10 minutes. For her, there are small tragedies and large traumas that sit quietly with her.

My favourite moment in the story is a spoiler so I won’t share. It’s a heart-breaking pause.

Hunter has woven these stories so loosely that it might feel frayed, but we are getting only a glimpse of two lives lived. I felt the sadness and weight of loss while reading The Certainties, and reading the acknowledgements after was like the second shoe dropping.

To me, the novel is about love and philosophy, and looking in the mirror and seeing a reflection of yourself, another self, your own self.

It’s a story of great sadness. Many times, I felt melancholic. What do you think about when it’s the end? What will you miss the most? Who are you? Which self will be remembered? When I think about philosophy, it’s this deep look into the nature of knowledge and how you live with what you know.

The perfect read for fans of Aislinn Hunter’s other works, readers of Jon McGregor‘s So Many Ways to Begin, or Timothy Findlay’s You Went Away.

Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens

Where the Crawdads Sing
http://Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens

Description: This novel is so widely reviewed, and loved, that I waited to read it. Such a great read. Highly recommended.

This is the story of Kya Clark, who is a poor white girl growing up in the marshlands near a little town called Barkley Cove, North Carolina. The story is set over 20 years from the 1950s to 1970s. Kya’s mother flees after years of abuse, leaving Kya, at the age of 7, to fend for herself. Soon after her brother leaves, then her father. But Kya remains and makes it work. She’s a scavenger, a fighter, a poet, and a keen observer of the marsh and the wildlife around her.

Kya learns to read, with the help of a friend of her brother. She figures out how to earn a living, with the help of Jumpin’, who runs the marine gas station. And she manages just fine, thank you very much, until she’s accused of murdering the town’s prized quarterback Chase Andrews.

Favourite moment: There are many beautiful descriptions of the marsh, its shells and grasses, the birds and animals. Kya’s love of nature is what connects her to Tate, who comes to teach her to read. There is a game of cat and mouse, which captures that excitement of a first crush.

In the center of the clearing was a rotted-down stump, so carpeted in moss it looked like an old man hiding under a cape. Kya approached it, then stopped. Lodged in the stump and sticking straight up was a thin black feather about five or six inches long. To most it would have looked ordinary, maybe a crow’s wing feather. But she knew it was extraordinary for it was the ‘eyebrow’ of a great blue heron, the feather that bows gracefully above the eye, extending back beyond her elegant head. One of the most exquisite fragments of the coastal marsh, right here. She had never found one but knew instantly what it was, having squatted eye to eye with herons all her life.

Chapter 13, feathers

The next day Kya rushes back to the stump to see if another feather is left. She starts leaving small gifts too. It’s electric. And then Tate appears and Kya is rather disappointed that the game is over. It’s young love and so touch-and-go. She’s like a fawn ready to sprint but Tate is kind and has good intentions. Thankfully, because the town kids are real arses.

There is great rhythm to the writing. I sped through this book. If you’re not one to read the award-winnings, it’s ok to give this one a try. It’s worthy of the praise.

Night Boat to Tangier by Kevin Barry

Description: A modern-day Waiting for Godot, with more overt drug references. This clever novel reads like a play, which is why it reminds me of Godot. Here we have two Irish ex-crooks who are waiting for a young woman at the port of Algericas. She doesn’t know they are waiting. It’s darkly comic, full of banter and great Irishisms.

Charlie Redmond and Maurice Hearne are long-time friends, and long-time drug runners. They’ve lucked out, lost out, and now have aged out. They are rundown, just like the terminal at Algericas, where they wait for 23-year-old Dilly who fled Ireland (and her father). They think she’ll be on the boat to or from Tangier. They are lying in wait.

The novel is a mix of stream of consciousness narrative and witty back and forth between the two men, with some prose sections that help fill in the details about how the two men met, their drug running days, romances and fights, and daughter Dilly. The characters are full of mirth, madness, and merriment in a way that reminds me so much of living in Ireland.

Personally speaking, Maurice? My arse isn’t right since the octopus we ate in Malaga.

Is it saying hello to you, Charlie?

It is, yeah. And of course the octopus wasn’t the worst of Malaga.

One of my favourite scenes is when the men accost a young traveller who they assume knows Dilly. They are playful at first, then threatening. The tension is real, especially if you’ve ever been on the receiving end of this type of encounter. It’s not the best scene in the book but it creates discomfort that is riff throughout the novel.

Geography lesson: Tangier is a Moroccan port on the Strait of Gibraltar. Algericas is in Spain and just across the bay from Gibraltar. Imagine that little tip where Europe bends down to the northern tip of Africa.

Night Boat to Tangier is brilliant. It can be hard to like but there is master and genius here. I think the audiobook of this would provide a rich experience with the Irish accent but might be harder to understand.

The Marrow Thieves by Cherie Dimaline

Description: The story begins with French (Francis) who is 11 and on the run from the Recruiters. Recruiters are basically white folks and traitors who are capturing Indigenous people and mining them for their bone marrow. The novel is set in a time when the world is almost destroyed by global warming, and clearly shit is going down.

Favourite Moment: French meets up with a group heading north. At one point they find an abandoned luxury lodge and sneak in for the night. French has the hots for Rose and she sneaks into his bed. But the group isn’t used to all sleeping in separate bedrooms and they feel safer together. French’s night of passion ends quickly when the youngest RiRi sneaks into bed.

I slide my arm out from under Rose, an almost painful separation, and climbed over Slooper, almost stepping on Chi-Boy, who was stretched out beside the bed, a discarded pillow under his head. Beside him was Wab. There were a few inches between them, but their breathing was matched, an even greater intimacy than touch.

So we were all here, crammed into one room, all of us besides Miig.

“Morning, French. I see we ended up having a slumber party last night.”

Spoke too soon.

page 74, “the four winds”

Watch The Marrow Thieves defended on CBC Canada Reads.

Download the Teacher’s Guide (good as a reading guide too).

Learn more about Cherie and her other books.

This is a futuristic, dystopian novel rooted in First Nation culture and history. Author Cherie Dimaline deserves all the awards and praise this book garnered.

Perfect for fans of Station Eleven by Emily St John Mandel and Son of a Trickster by Eden Robinson. I found this book spooky and unsettling but also beautiful.

The Night Gardener by Jonathan Auxier

The Governor General’s Shortlisted Novel is a spooky tale about two Irish kids who are travelling alone in the English countryside looking for work. They are orphaned and at the end of their means, but luckily get work in a crumbling manor house deep in the woods. Maybe not so lucky.

The villagers call the area sourwoods and even the kids horse doesn’t want to cross the bridge into the woods. The family seems nice enough, but the kids discover it’s the Night Gardener that they really need to fear.

This is a suspenseful read that sent my 7-year-old under the covers by chapter 2. I’d say this book is for 10 and up. It’s spooky and not exactly a heartwarming ending either.

Favourite Moment: Kip and Molly meet an old woman on the road who could be a witch. Her name is Hester Kettle and she is a storyteller who travels about trading songs for lodgings and food. She has a huge sack full of odd things, lots of advice, and meets the pair on a few occasions. Each is a rather entertaining moment in the story.

Kip pulled away. “And there’s a tree—a great big, horrible tree. Every night, the man feeds and cares for it.”

“Is that so?” The old woman was watching Kip with a look that Molly could only describe as hunger.

Molly put a hand on her brother’s shoulder, but she did not stop him. Kip hopped closer, swallowing. “You know every story there is around these parts. So tell us: Do you know one about a man and a tree?”

The woman looked at Kip and then at Molly. “As a matter of fact, I do.”

chapter 30

The Night Gardener is perfect for fans of Coraline by Neil Gaiman.

The Case of the Missing Auntie by Michael Hutchinson

Book 2 in The Mighty Muskrats Mystery Series is even better than the first.

In the bright lights of the big city, the Mighty Muskrats search for Grandpa’s lost sister who was grabbed in the Sixties Scoop.

The Mighty Muskrats are four cousins from the Windy Lake First Nation, who are incredibly close and often find themselves solving mysteries. In book 1 The Case of Windy Lake, they found a lost archaeologist. Now they are off to the city (Winnipeg) to have fun at the Exhibition Fair. But the Mighty Muskrats get waylaid by other plans. On one of their first days in the city, they meet Brett at the mall. He’s a friend who recently moved away from Windy Lake, but the city has changed him and the kids find out the hard way.

Subtle and overt racism is present throughout the story, but Chickadee and her cousins also meet some great people who help them learn about how the government scooped up and adopted out Native kids to strangers without their parents’ permission. Grandpa’s little sister has been lost to him for decades but he’s started dreaming of her and Chickadee is determined to do what she can to reunite her family.

What I like about Hutchinson’s stories is that they are great mysteries that my son loves to read, and they contain hard truths about Canada’s treatment of First Nations people that all readers show know and understand.

The Poppy War by R.F. Kuang

The Poppy War is the first instalment in a Chinese-history inspired epic fantasy about empire, warfare, shamanism, and opium.

Rin is a war orphan living in the south part of the Empire, well away from the ruling class in the north. She means nothing to her guardians, who are quite happy to sell her off to a local official in exchange for him turning a blind eye to their illegal opium trade. Rin has other ideas.

Actually only one idea.

Rin convinces the local tutor to help her study for the Keju, the Empire-wide test to find the most talented youth who are then taught in the Empire’s elite military academies. Rin needs to score high in order to get into Sinegard, the most elite military school in Nikan, and the one that will give her free tuition.

As you can imagine, this all comes to pass. Rin’s next battle is against her classmates. She is discriminated against for her dark skin and southern accent. She is belittled for having no martial arts training, for being poor, for being female. But Rin is a fighter and she prevails against all the odds and becomes one of the top students in the school. Just in time to go to war.

This is a novel about tapping into your own powers and being brave. But it’s also about the xenophobic storytelling that informs how people treat each other. Kuang offers readers a rich fantasy, informed by 19th-century colonialism, Chinese history and its shamans and gods. The costs of war are at the forefront of the story and violence plays out in each part of the narrative, from Rin’s war-orphan childhood to the dehumanizing war-time experiments on civilians and soldiers.

There is blood and gore, so it’s not great for sensitive readers. I purchased my copy at Kidsbooks in Vancouver and they emailed to say they were moving from their teen section to adult. That said, I think a mature reader will enjoy the fantasy and also give pause to think about the history informing the novel.

Perfect for fans of Lord of the Rings or Do Not Say We Have Nothing by Madeleine Thien.

The Case of Windy Lake (A Mighty Muskrats Mystery) by Michael Hutchinson

The Case of Windy Lake was the co-winner in Second Story Press’ 2018 Indigenous Writing Contest

The first book in this mystery series for readers age 9-12 introduces readers to cousins Sam, Otter, Atim, and Chickadee. This inseparable quartet are nicknamed the Mighty Muskrats for how they stick together and tromp around the rez solving mysteries. In this story, they need all their wits about them to figure out what has happened to a missing archaeologist working for the nearby mine.

Most mystery / detective series are firmly placed in white, middle-class neighbourhoods but this community is full of characters from Ugly Fish, a hunting and fishing guide, to Denice, the kids’ activist cousin, to various Elders and company men working at the nearby mine.

The First Nation residents are no fan of the mine or the bone-digger, but they also want to rescue the lost man. The Mighty Muskrats are keen to find him too, and show their Uncle (the cop) just how helpful they can be.

The underlying story is that of the conflicting feelings about the mine. On the one hand there are good people working there who need the job to support their families. On the other, there are environmental concerns about water and air pollution, how the mine changes the land and the locals ability to fish and hunt.

Overall this is a fun mystery, and a story about the ties between families, neighbours, and communities.

Michael Hutchinson is a member of the Misipawistik Cree Nation, north of Winnipeg. He currently lives in Ottawa, Ontario where he works at the Assembly of First Nations, which advocates for First Nation families and communities across Canada.

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