Thursday, July 16, 2009

September Book Club Selections

The Seniors Book Club is taking a summer break and will meet again on Wednesday, September 9th, at 2 pm in the second floor Training Room. We will discuss Reading by Lightning, the exciting first novel by Manitoba writer Joan Thomas. The book just won the Commonwealth Writer's Prize for Best First Book (Canada and the Caribbean) and was the winner of an online poll in The Winnipeg Foundation's On the Same Page Literacy program (which means the novel will be promoted in Manitoba schools and to the public in general as THE book to read this year).

Here is a glowing review from Quill & Quire:

Most first-time novelists strain for the gold ring; Joan Thomas grabs it effortlessly in this wonderful book. Undoubtedly, her years editing, reviewing, and writing about other writers’ work in The Globe and Mail and elsewhere – winning a National Magazine Award in the process – have helped hone her skills.

Reading by Lightning begins in Lancashire and rural Manitoba in the early years of the 20th century. William Piper has reluctantly emigrated to Canada as part of a shady scheme that lines its Christian leaders’ pockets. Since then, he has hung on by dint of endless, soul-winnowing labour, yet he manages to send his 16-year-old daughter Lily to England, ostensibly to assist her widowed grandmother but in actuality as a way of removing her from the clutches of her evangelical mother.

Lily blossoms in England, finding warmth and easy affection. George, her autodidact cousin (“a brain on a stick,” his father growls), opens the world to her, and the two become “great pals.” But Lily is compelled to make them more – an impulse fuelled by hormones but doomed by history. The Second World War revs up, and George, desperate for experience, submits himself to the machine.

As George is drawn into the war, Lily is recalled to the farm in Canada to care for her ailing mother. Grieving and resentful, she finds herself back in a domestic trap of emotional and sensory deprivation. There is a risk that the novel could get stuck there too, but fortunately Thomas provides a surprising plot twist to keep the narrative moving. Although the war is far from over, Thomas’s final extraordinary scene leaves the reader with a sense of possibility and a faith in the future.

Thomas’s finely nuanced sensibility variously evokes Austen, Alice Munro, and Richard B. Wright. She captures verbal intonations as if she has overheard them, and conjures characters so vividly that we can almost reach out and touch them. A remarkable debut.

Jack McGreary is a young man with a troubled soul and a gift for scams. Raised by his father in the dying town of Paradise Flats amid the dust storms of the 1930s, Jack has learned to live by his wits. And when a pair of fast-talking swindlers named Virgil Ray and Miss Rose blow through town, Jack joins forces with them.

Together they go on a crime spree across the Southwest, pulling a series of elaborate and often hilarious cons. Young Jack is swept along into a world of hot jazz and cold calculating crimes of the heart, as the sexual tension between him and Miss Rose grows. Someone is being set up. (Source: www.willferguson.ca)

For a wealth of background information on this novel, go to the author's website.

2 comments:

JulieM said...

I loved this book and can hardly wait to discuss at the meeting next Monday. Looking forward to seeing y'all after a loooong summer!!

Unknown said...

Well, we certainly were not at a loss for words at the Book Club meeting this evening. What a great group! Thanks for all the research support, Luise.