I am in Vancouver for a week at the Vancouver International Writers & Readers Festival, staying at the lovely Sylvia Hotel on English
Bay. The weather on Tuesday was gloriously sunny, so my companions and I spent
the day walking in Stanley Park before attending the Grand Openings event on
Granville Island last night. The lineup of seven authors was stellar, as is
usual at this festival, but Cate Kennedy and Helen Oyeyemi were the authors I
was most excited to hear.
Kennedy read from two new books, including a heartbreaking
excerpt from the novel The World Beneath, about a woman with Alzheimer's, in
which her husband and son collude in denying her alcoholism to a doctor.
Kennedy chose a poem (from A Taste of River Water) that was a story in itself,
and she mentioned that her poems are always like that. I’d love to hear more, but I think that book will be hard to find in Canada. I looked at The World Beneath at the festival bookstore and was horrified to read
one of the quotes on the back (from Library Journal) comparing her writing to
Jodi Picoult! If you dislike Picoult’s style as much as I do, believe me that
Kennedy is nothing like that. She makes keen observations about human interactions
and chooses her words carefully. (See my review of Dark Roots.) It was too bad that the festival bookstore didn't have many copies of Kennedy's books available, because the supply had already run out by the intermission.
I’m halfway through Oyeyemi’s Mr. Fox at the moment –
enjoying it very much – and can attest that it is even more delightful to hear
it read aloud. The narrative is a sly twist on Bluebeard in which an author
meets his match in a character come to life. (See also my review of The Icarus Girl.)
Dermot Healy told us he would speak slowly on account of his
Irish accent. He read a very funny part from Long Time, No See about an
infestation of ghost chickens.
David Bezmozgis also made me chuckle. He read about a
Russian Jewish refugee worker in Italy who had a special talent – that of
finding suitable places to copulate – in The Free World.
Guy Vanderhaeghe seemed nervous and spent a lot of time setting the scene for A Good Man. His excerpt, about Sitting Bull
arriving one evening into a Sioux camp after defeating Custer,
could have stood on its own. It reminded me of Fools Crow by James Welch. Based
on my enjoyment of The Englishman’s Boy and The Last Crossing (as well as
Welch’s book), I’ll add Vanderhaeghe’s new book to my TBR pile.
Madeleine Thien’s Dogs at the Perimeter is about genocide in
Cambodia, so it was considerate of her to read from a side story in that novel.
She said her account of an artist who was losing language because of a neurological
disorder was based on a woman from North Vancouver.
Lloyd Jones told us about a blind German man who lives with
a companion from New Zealand and a nurse from Tunisia. I’ve really enjoyed a
couple of his earlier novels (Mister Pip and The Book of Fame) and will give
this new one (Hand Me Down World) a chance too, but either the part he chose wasn't particularly compelling or I was just too tired to take in the last reading of the
evening.
I plan to keep blogging through the rest of the festival. The next events I'll attend are on Thursday (The Forest and the Trees and Word!) so today is another day to enjoy the beautiful city of Vancouver.
Whoo, this sounds like so much fun! I'm looking forward to reading more of your posts about it.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your enthusiasm, Avis. This trip is all about books. Today I visited the fabulous main branch of the Vancouver Public Library, which looks like a modern coliseum.
ReplyDeleteI'm happy to be able to experience the festival vicariously through you! I just checked out the list of authors and wow, so many familiar names. Are you going to get to see Marina Endicott? She'd be one of my top choices of authors to see.
ReplyDeleteI can hear Marina Endicott in Edmonton, so it doesn't matter that she won't be at any of the events I attend in Vancouver. I'm really sorry that I couldn't fit Linda Grant into my schedule, however.
ReplyDeleteLucky you that you can see Endicott so easily! I hope she comes to Montreal one of these days. I confess I don't know Linda Grant. What book of hers would you recommend?
ReplyDeleteThe Thoughtful Dresser, since you like essays.
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