Saturday, September 26, 2009
Wipe your feet, ingrates
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
what a lovely war
Monday, September 21, 2009
Giller longlist
Saturday, September 19, 2009
to be continued surely

Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Don't take my word for it
Seem formulaic? That's because it is."
Sunday, September 13, 2009
Friday, September 11, 2009
indulge me
Barbara Kay loves men
I can report in good conscience I have no apologies to make for my pre-emptive "review." Like so many other Canadian novels, February is indeed dying in beauty, and it is worth a few paragraphs to explain why, because it is so representative of what the Canadian fiction publishing industry -- itself highly feminized by comparison to 40 years ago -- seems to like, and typical of what wins or is at least nominated for awards here.
Moore is an enormously talented writer, but like so many others of her sensitive, creative workshopped-to-death ilk, a writer's writer privileging an artistic, leisured rendering of memory and feeling over prole-friendly dialogue, action and, above all, plot."
(Sept 9)
Barbara Kay's "pre-emptive review" was an earlier column swatting a profile by Post reporter Katherine Laidlaw. Kay hadn't read the novel but felt qualified to say,
"Take, for example, Katherine Laidlaw's gushy July 9 Post profile of twice-nominated Giller contender Lisa Moore and her new novel, February. I don't know Katherine Laidlaw, but from her uncritical admiration for the novel's preternaturally CanLittish values, she would doubtless be shocked to discover that her selected quotations from, and observations about, Moore, while honorifically intended, smothered -- rather than aroused--my interest in reading the novel."
(July 15)
The dustup is here, but essentially Barbara Kay doesn't care for all the
"Me, me, me and my extraordinary capacity for sadness. Welcome to the unrelenting self-regard of CanLit, where it's all about nobly suffering women or feminized men: men immobilized in situations of physical, psychological or economic impotence (that is when they're not falling through the ice and nearly drowning), rather than demonstrating manly courage in risk-taking or heroic mode."
I'm not sure what "CanLittish values" Kay has such trouble with and it doesn't matter much because she then trots out the tired bits about some (very few) writers getting the occasional pittance from government grants so they can eat while writing. From her screed it sounds as if anyone with a PC and a dream just needs to get in line, but I never see this kind of invective hurled at police or firefighters, who presumably sit down from time to time.
In short, it's political so all your pretty sentences and introspection don't matter much unless your a Canadian version of Ayn Rand.
Sorry ladies.
Kay's opinions are as valid as anyone else, but maybe read the book before putting anything in print, and if CanLit isn't your thing, Canadians do write pretty damn good plots, too.
Tuesday, September 08, 2009
Preach on, Brother Andrew
What happened to bad's fun side? Why can you go through a year's worth of prize-winners without once experiencing even the slightest shiver of fear? Shame, yes, and a good deal of sensitivity training. But leave-the-lights-on fear? The literary project seemed to have given that up along with the booze and grass and making out with the wrong people at parties.
(I'm being cheeky and provocative for the sake of argument here, of course. But, now that I mention it, what ever happened to provocation and cheekiness for the sake of argument?)
Words Worth will never be confused with a horror readers paradise, but we're making some inroads into genre. The bad kids are just more fun to hang out with.
If we can make it here....
Sunday, September 06, 2009
and in this corner....
The only question is when?
event horizons

Wednesday, September 02, 2009
in the old days these kinds of misfires were only courtesy of Indigo
Then there are the classification errors, which taken together can make for a kind of absurdist poetry. H.L. Mencken's The American Language is classified as Family & Relationships. A French edition of Hamlet and a Japanese edition of Madame Bovary are both classified as Antiques and Collectibles (a 1930 English edition of Flaubert's novel is classified under Physicians, which I suppose makes a bit more sense.) An edition of Moby Dick is labeled Computers; The Cat Lover's Book of Fascinating Facts falls under Technology & Engineering. And a catalog of copyright entries from the Library of Congress is listed under Drama (for a moment I wondered if maybe that one was just Google's little joke)."
It's funny because it's true.