Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More


On October 19th at 8:00 PM I had the great privilege of attending this event.  It was fabulous.
The following are the 3 authors who participated and their bios, plus a bit about their latest books and a bit of what they talked about at this event:
Please note, the bios are taken directly from the festival guide and the book descriptions are taken from the book,  and are not my own words.  What is written about the event is from me, except of course, the quotations.  The photos of me with Ms. Gibb and Mr. Schroeder were taken with my camera by 2 helpful audience members who were waiting to get their own books signed.  I took the photo of Mr. Marlantes, myself.  No photos we allowed during the event, itself.
Bios: Camilla Gibb is the author of four novels—Mouthing the Words, The Petty Details of So-and- so’s Life, Sweetness in the Belly and, her latest, The Beauty of Humanity Movement—as well as numerous short stories, articles and reviews. She was the winner of the Trillium Book Award in 2006, was a Scotiabank Giller Prize short list nominee in 2005, won the City of Toronto Book Award in 2000 and received the CBC Canadian Literary Award in 2001. Gibb was one of two Canadians named to the prestigious Orange Futures List, recognizing 21 promising international authors. She has also served as vice-president of PEN Canada.

Book Description for her latest book, The Beauty of Humanity Movement:

Set in contemporary Vietnam, this is the story of a country undergoing momentous change and the story of how family is defined — not always by bloodlines but by the heart.

Tu’ is a young tour guide working in Hanoi for a company called New Dawn. While he leads tourists through the city, including American vets on “war tours,” he starts to wonder what it is they are seeing of Vietnam —and what they miss entirely. Maggie, who is Vietnamese by birth but has lived most her life in the U.S., has returned to her country of origin in search of clues to her dissident father’s disappearance during the war. Holding the story together is Old Man Hung, who has lived through decades of political upheaval and has still found a way to feed hope to his community of pondside dwellers.

This is a keenly observed and skillfully wrought novel about the reverberation of conflict through generations, the enduring legacy of art, and the redemption and renewal of long-lost love.

Event: During the introduction, the host, Jerry Wasserman said that Ms. Gibb had her first child just 5 weeks before this event.  I must say, she looked terrific!

Camilla pointed out that 60 percent of Vietnams current population was born after the Vietnam war.  She said that she wanted to explore the stories of that population, the untold stories.  She said that the novels “is about characters I know and love.”

Bios: Karl Marlantes is a graduate of Yale University and was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University. He served as a Marine in Vietnam, where he was awarded the Navy Cross, the Bronze Star, two Navy Commendation Medals for Valor, two Purple Hearts and 10 Medals. His Vietnam experience informs his acclaimed first novel, Matterhorn, which he crafted over a period of 30 years. He lives in rural Washington state.

Book Description of his latest book, Matterhorn:

The novel is set during the winter monsoon season of 1968-69 on and around a fire support base called Matterhorn, located in the mountains of the remote north-western corner of Quang-Tri Province. The protagonist, a young and ambitious Marine lieutenant, wants to command a company to further his civilian political ambitions. Two people stand in his way. The first is a well-loved, combat-weary lieutenant of his own age, who desperately wants out of the bush, but who does not want to leave his Marines with an inexperienced and overly ambitious officer. The second is an angry young leader of the company s radical blacks, who has all the political skill, savvy, and ambition of the protagonist. As the protagonist experiences the costs of combat, he sees the terrible results of his ambition and starts to change, learning that compassion and heart are more important than ambition and skill.

Event: Mr. Marlantes said the Matterhorn is “the central metaphor for self-inflicted wound and mistake.”   His book took 30 years to get published.  He wrote it right after the war and publishers told him that people didn’t want to read about it.  He pitched it again in the 80’s and was told that there were too many books about the war, and then he finally got published.  Each time it was rejected, he refined it some more but he never gave up.

Bios: Adam Lewis Schroeder is the author of the story collection Kingdom of Monkeys, a Danuta Gleed Award finalist, and the novel Empress of Asia, nominated for the Amazon.ca/Books in Canada First Novel Award and the Ethel Wilson Fiction

Prize. His story, “This Is Not the End My Friend,” appears in Darwin’s Bastards: Astounding Tales from Tomorrow. His new novel is In the Fabled East. He lives in Penticton.

Book description of his latest book, In the Fabled East:

From one of Canada’s best young voices comes a sweeping literary adventure set against the backdrop of French Indochina.

Paris, 1909: Adélie Tremier, a young widow suffering the final stages of tuberculosis, flees for French-occupied Indochina, through the lush forests of Laos, to seek out a fabled spring of immortality that might allow her to return to her nine-year-old son.

Laos, 1936: Pierre Lazarie, a young academic turned Saigon bureaucrat, is sent by Adélie’s son, now an Army captain, to find his longlost mother. Although his assigned quest fulfills Pierre’s fantasy to travel up the exotic Mekong, he is saddled with his colleague Henri LeDallic, an Indochina old-timer who would rather glory in his loutish past than hunt for ghosts in the jungle. Yet what this mismatched pair discovers forms the mysterious heart of Adam Lewis Schroeder’s brilliant and compelling new novel.

Bridging history from 1890s Aix-en-Provence to American involvement in 1950s Vietnam, In the Fabled East is a rich and sensual depiction of Southeast Asia, charting the loss of innocence of both individuals and the world at large. Echoing Graham Greene and Joseph Conrad, this is historical fiction written with wisdom and panache.

Event: Before Mr Schroeder started his reading, he held out his book for the audience to see and said, “this is a beautiful book.”  Then he partially removed the dust cover and said, “see, it’s even beautiful under the dust cover.”  The crowd laughed.  His reading was superb, he used excellent voice inflections, movements, and facial expressions.  It was like he was acting it out for us. 

When it came time for questions for the audience, I only got to ask one.  I asked Mr. Schroeder if he ever considered reading books for audio.  He said it was up to the publisher but thanked me for my praise.  Later, when he was signing my copy of his book, Empress of Asia, he said that he was going to ask his publisher about it because he thought it was a good idea for his book.  I pointed out that he would be great for reading other author’s works aloud as well.

Going into the event, I knew already that I wanted to read Camilla Gibbs latest book, The Beauty of Humanity Movement.  In fact, I hoped to read it before the event however it hasn’t arrived from the publisher yet.  One of my all time favourite books is Ms. Gibb’s, Sweetness In the Belly!

Now that I have heard more about all three books from the authors, themselves, I want to read all 3 books!  As the title of my blog says, So Many Precious books, So Little Time.

Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Bow Grip by Ivan E. Coyote

Posted by Teddyrose@1 on October 19, 2010
Posted in 23rd Writers FestivalBooks Read in 2010  | 2 Comments

Bow Grip takes place in present tense, in around Drumheller and Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Joseph is a 40-something divorced auto mechanic, trying to move on with his life. His wife Allyson left him for his hockey buddy’s wife, Kathleen and moved from Drumheller to Calgary.

The story opens with Joseph trying to sell his car for cash but James Carson doesn’t have any money. He does however have a cello and talks Joseph into a trade. Joseph figure that he can sell the cello but from the moment he opens the case he wants to learn how to play it. Besides, his mom has been after him to get some kind of hobbies to take his mind off his problems.
James calls him back a couple of days later and said that the car wouldn’t start and that he needs to go out of town. Joseph goes to take a look and finds more than he bargains for. There is a residue all over the inside of the car and he finds duct tape and a hose on the inside of the truck. Joseph doesn’t know how to deal with James suicide attempt, should he talk to him about it or just keep quiet and fix the car? He doesn’t know him very well, has only seen him around town a few times. He decides to buy some time and James that he needs to bring it into the shop but will personally deliver it as soon as it’s fixed.
He gets the car fixed by the next day but when he goes to deliver it, James is gone. His land-lord said that he left town. This is what sparks a trip to Calgary and a journey of self-discovery and forgiveness.
This is a short novel, all of 165 pages but it really packs a punch. It is choke full of quirky characters, vivid descriptions of landscape, and beautiful prose.
Bow Gip is the winner of the 2007 ReLit Award for Best Novel and has been Shortlisted for the 2007 Ferro-Grumley Award for Women’s Fiction . This is Ivan E. Coyote’s first novel. She has also written several short story collections including her latest, Missed Her, published in December 2010. Bow Grip is the first book I have read by Coyote but certainly won’t be the last!
4.5/5
Ivan E. Coyote was born in Whitehorse, Canada and now resides in Victoria, BC, Canada. She will be appearing at the 23rd Vancouver International Writers & Readers Festival. Event #64 Short Stories, Varied Voices. I will be attending this event, so stay tuned for my coverage of it.
If you have reviewed this book, please leave a link in the comments.
Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Do Not Touch by Billie Livingston

Posted by Teddyrose@1 on October 18, 2010
Posted in 23rd Writers FestivalShort Story Read in 2010  | 5 Comments

This is the second in a series of short story reviews of authors I will be seeing at the Vancouver International Writers & Readers Festival.  The event I will see them at is #64 Short Stories, Varied Voices, on Sunday, October 24th.

This short story by Billie Livingston appeared in The Walrus and is from her new book Greedy Little EyesYou can read it here.

The first sentence of this story is, “You are never as lonely as when you are lonely in the company of your lover.”  This sets the tone for the entire story.

The narrator of the story is a un-named woman who has a boyfriend, Thomas.  She was working in a record shop and because of a comment he made about her, she was promoted to assistant manager.  She said, “Thomas has clout in the music world.”   

Soon after that she moved in with Thomas.  She said, “I should have known something was wrong when Thomas sucked back the better part of a twenty-sixer of Glenlivet before he could kiss me the first time.”  There was something wrong however, I wont tell you any more because I don’t want to risk spoilers.

The story feels a little choppy and rushed to me but does reach a surprising conclusion.  From reading this very short story, all of eight pages, I can tell Billie Livingston has the gift of prose.  I look forward to reading the rest of this short story collection.

Please stay tuned tomorrow, for my review of ‘Bow Grip’ by short story writer Ivan E. Coyote.  She has done several short story collection but Bow Grip is her first novel.  She will also be appearing at event #64 Short Stories, Varied Voices, on Sunday, October 24th.

Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.