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Seventeenth Issue
Volume 9, No. 1
 



features

Coming Of Age Reconsidered
By Claire Holden Rothman

Of Stripteasers And Scoundrels
By Joel Yanofsky


fiction

All That Glitters
Reviewed by Ami Sands Brodoff

Girls Closed In
Reviewed by Ami Sands Brodoff

The Rent Collector
Reviewed by Kristine Kowalchuk

The Extraordinary Garden
Reviewed by X. I. Selene

Adieu, Betty Crocker
Reviewed by X. I. Selene

The Far Away Home
Reviewed by Ibi Kaslik

The School At Chartres
Reviewed by Kelly Norah Drukker

Sextant
Reviewed by Angie Gallop

Cities Of Weather
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

The Pagan Nuptials Of Julia
Reviewed by William Brown

The Unyielding Clamour Of The Night
Reviewed by Linda Leith


fiction at a glance

Guests Of Chance
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik


non-fiction

Stephen Harper And The Future Of Canada
Reviewed by Ted Smith

Farewell, Babylon: Coming Of Age In Jewish Baghdad
Reviewed by Mary Soderstrom

Margaret Macdonald: Imperial Daughter
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

How To Be An Intellectual In The Age Of Tv: The Lessons Of Gore Vidal
Reviewed by Mark Heffernan

The Adaptable House
Reviewed by Pamela Plumb

Truth Is Naked, All Others Pay Cash: An Autobiographical Exaggeration
Reviewed by Kimberly Bourgeois

Alexander Brott: My Lives In Music
Reviewed by Brian MacMillan


non-fiction at a glance

Dancing With Fear: Tips And Wisdom From Breast Cancer Survivors
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

The (practical) Guide To Finding The (right) Finance Job In Canada
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Silk Stocking Mats: Hooked Mats Of The Grenfell Mission
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

On All Frontiers: Four Centuries Of Canadian Nursing
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Yes, Sister: Memoir Of A Young Nurse
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik



poetry

Standing Wave
Reviewed by Bert Almon

The Pallikari Of Nesmine Rifat
Reviewed by Bert Almon

The Jill Kelly Poems
Reviewed by Bert Almon

Satie's Sad Piano
Reviewed by Bert Almon



young readers

Lucille Teasdale: Doctor Of Courage
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Earth To Audrey
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Emily's Piano
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

On The Game
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Split
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Birdhouses
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Bearcub And Mama
Reviewed by Carol-Ann hoyte

The Way To Slumbertown
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Dodo La Planete Do / Dream Songs Night Songs
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte




The Far Away Home
By Marci Denesiuk
$18.95
paper 169 pp.
NeWest Press 1-869300-79-0
fiction


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New Document Marci Denesiuk’s debut short story collection focuses on the unexamined lives of anchorless women on the brink of losing what little self-awareness and/or sanity they have left. Artful and deftly compassionate, Denesiuk creates a universe where lives of all shapes and sizes are deemed valuable and worthy of examination.

The anti-heroines in The Far Away Home are frequently misfits, eccentrics or outsiders, women who inhabit vast physical and emotional spaces and wrangle with existential crises, one foot firmly planted in the mundane. In “Pieces,” an awkward Jody reflects on her abortion, her best friend’s attempted castration, and how to deal with her fire-eating ex; in “Two Feet in Texas” the obese Pina wins the souls of her tormentors in a poker game as her pants split; in “Cold Sleep,” Caroline, the wife of an RCMP officer stationed in the North, tries to rouse herself from a permanent sleep to come to terms with her community and a place too limitless to understand.

What’s compelling about Denesiuk’s stories is the lyrical tension between the quotidian and the disturbing. She seamlessly juxtaposes the ridiculous and the macabre. “The Perfect Vacation,” for example, traces a balloon store owner’s growing sexual obsession with physically challenged people. On the surface, the story is light and amusing - an easy read - and yet there is no doubt that the enterprising woman at the centre of this narrative has become completely unhinged by the end of her vacation.

Denesiuk’s subtlety and empathy as a writer enable her to tackle grand themes like sex, death, home, and female subordination. To wit: most of the stories deal with women coping with gynecological problems or in sexually compromised positions. In “Insomnia,” sleepless Katherine, desperate for quick cash after leaving her boyfriend - who denied her the right to empty her bowels - tries her hand at prostitution. Half-asleep, and barely financially afloat, most of the women in this collection have had their wombs or bowels torn and tampered with; all are far from home and all find themselves alienated by their own sexuality, relationships, and bodies. These characters reflect the unromantic and often paradoxical quandary of modern womanhood. Cut loose from their families and their men, these women are at once freed by the failure of traditional male-female relationships and bound by their bodily urges.

What makes The Far Away Home successful is the disarming hope and beauty the author reveals in the overlooked and ‘unremarkable’ lives of these women. For while the world is often an indifferent and grotesque place for misfits of The Far Away Home, the sustained humanity that connects all the characters and stories makes this book a joy to read. As one character writes to another in a love letter, there are times connections fail, “like a toe, for example, meeting an ear with utter disinterest.” And yet there are also moments of recognition, moments when fingers cross and connect, when “[w]e are all of one mind, of one soul - reflections and variations of one another.”

By Ibi Kaslik, Whose debut novel "Skinny" was shortlisted for the 2004 Amazon.ca/books in Canada First Novel Award



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