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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




Satie's Sad Piano
By Carolyn Marie Souaid
$14.95
paper 95 pp.
Signature Editions 1-897109-01-6
poetry


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New Document Carolyn Marie Souaid is a thoroughly serious writer: centric, not eccentric, and eager to confront the key issues of Canadian society. Satie’s Sad Piano is a civic elegy in the tradition of Dennis Lee, a poem exploring Canada’s uncertain destiny. She begins with the announcement of the death of Pierre Trudeau on September 28, 2000. The broadcast triggers the memories of a failed love affair in the protagonist, Venus, who became involved with a charismatic teacher and poet in 1968, the year of Trudeau’s election. The symbolic name given to the protagonist has its source in Romeo and Juliet: “Venus smiles not in a house of tears.” The repressions of a Catholic girlhood and adolescence lived just before the Quiet Revolution changed Quebec give a special edginess to Venus’s rebellious commitment to the body.

Souaid finds tropes as clever as Solway’s to describe physical desire: “her filly slit weeping / warm champagne.” Venus encounters not a true love of her own age but a “Charlie Manson of Letters” who doesn’t scruple to become involved with her: abuse of trust we’d call it now. Their affair is associated with the outburst of Trudeaumania in the 1968 election. It was, after all, the 1960s, and a politician with the charisma of a pop star was briefly conceivable. Souaid knows that Trudeau was more than a momentary celebrity, and she captures the power and the flaws of his hubristic personality. The failure of Venus’s affair and the abortion of her baby parallel the failure of Trudeau’s affair with his country. In both cases, the stormy overture dwindles into the oddities symbolized by Satie’s sad little piano pieces. It may seem odd for a poet to use a love affair as an analogue with Trudeau’s political career, but then Trudeau’s own private life became painfully public. Considering that Souaid was about nine when Trudeaumania swept Canada, she has captured the era very accurately. Souaid doesn’t rely exclusively on storytelling: she deploys rhyme subtly, her use of alliteration and consonance can be startling, and her images are powerful and original. This is a book that will engage its readers stylistically, emotionally, and perhaps even politically.

By Bert Almon, who teaches modern literature and creative writing at the University of Alberta



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