| A Review of: Sointula by Shannon CowanBill Gaston is not afraid to take risks, and in his latest novel,
Sointula, his exploration into the sacred and profane heart of
coastal British Columbia is a quest of Quixotic proportions.
With such accolades as the Timothy Findley Award, a Giller Prize
nomination, and the Canadian Literary Award for Fiction under his
belt, not to mention twelve other books of prose, poetry, and drama,
Gaston deserves to have a wide readership by now. That he situates
himself outside the literary centre of Canada-first in New Brunswick
where he served as editor of The Fiddlehead, and now in pastoral
Victoria, "the farthest west a body can go"-is perhaps
one reason for the delay. Another may be that he tackles characters
who are less than popular by literary standards: Bobby Bonaduce,
for instance, the scarred and broken hockey player of The Good Body;
or the gambling addicts and embittered, illegitimate children that
people his short story collections, like Sex is Red and Mount
Appetite. Sointula may be the book that brings him to the rest of
Canada and beyond.
At the centre of his fifth novel is the real-life colony of Sointula,
founded by Finnish immigrants, off the northwestern tip of Vancouver
Island, at the turn of the last century. At the book's centre is
also the idea of personal utopia, that metaphysical place where
reality is blissful and everything makes a good deal of sense.
Sointula, after all, means "place of harmony" in Finnish,
and what better place to find congruity than on the edge of the
sea?
Striving to reach Sointula physically and spiritually are two
characters thrown together by attraction and circumstance. Evelyn
Poole is a middle-aged first lady, wife to the mayor of Oakville,
who at the book's opening embraces a life of ocean-going vagrancy
after witnessing the death of her former lover in a Victoria hospital.
Peter Gore is a displaced American (formerly a displaced Brit) who
has shucked off his life as a biology teacher to write a travel
book about Vancouver Island. Together they head northwest in a
stolen kayak, seeking the place where Evelyn's estranged son is
watching whales.
It's the classic pull of the characters' individual journeys that
initially propels the story through prose dense with rumination.
Gore's book, tentatively titled The Rim, ventures that Vancouver
Island is the last place on earth left to go. When he isn't fiddling
with his five thousand dollar computer and solar battery pack,
scratching his brain for compelling sentences that inevitably end
up on the trash heap, he is seeking "to make the sun move
slower in the sky" by defining a place, a sensation, a moment
in time, and attempting to understand the edge of the world.
Evelyn, on the other hand, is coming off her dedicated use of
anti-depressants. She's grieving the loss of her lover, her life's
choices, and the disappearance of her son, by dropping all contact
with civilization. Laden with their respective baggage, Peter and
Evelyn make painstaking progress up Vancouver Island's east coast.
There are obstacles, including pesky gall bladder attacks (Peter's),
hallucinations (Evelyn's), and a painful shortage of food. When the
pair reaches a much-needed turning point, Peter finally asks himself
what he is doing with this woman. He wonders whether she even wants
to get where she's going? At last Gaston ups the stakes, and the
novel moves from meandering inner narrative to external events with
more precise consequences. Evelyn grows and reveals herself; Gore
entertains with giddy witticisms. Evelyn's son, Tom, well, he just
looks for whales.
Longer novels take warm-up time, and Gaston uses these first chapters
to situate us in his characters' minds and lives. His writing is
sharp, and his observations comic but revealing. Even Evelyn's
zig-zagging has purpose, and anyone with a rudimentary sense of
British Columbia geography will be glad when Peter puts his finger
on what seems like an outsider's inept navigation. (Gladder still
when he and Evelyn hatch an alternate plan. Aside from sunburn and
sore muscles, the pair were undoubtedly bound to develop giardia
lamblia if they continued to drink out of unfiltered creeks.)
As outsiders themselves, Evelyn and Peter make excellent vehicles
for readers coming to terms with Vancouver Island's wild side, and
their banter often takes the form of a travelogue: "Gore grunts
a hollow agreement. Sointula...The Finns that stayed-about two
hundred-settled into socialist poverty, fishing. In the late sixties
a second smash of utopians moved up from urban America, barging in
on the Finns and bringing their acid and alfalfa sprouts and naked
dances under solstice moons, whereupon Sointula enjoyed several
more fires, and more than one shooting."
Fans of Gaston will find the same backhanded observations, the same
surprising insights and gleeful perversities shared by the characters
as in his previous books. He excels at getting inside hearts of all
ages-from bullet-injured Tom Poole to snivelling, sodden (and gasp,
utterly sentimental) Peter Gore. His characters are strangers, fish
out of their proverbial waters, emerging from the well-lit backdrop
of post 9/11 cynicism and earthly destruction to a shaky and often
drug-induced clarity. Their world is crumbling, but they are artful
and humane. As Gore aptly points out during his liaison with bad
TV, "... the shittiest manure gives rise to the most vigorous
plants."
Which brings us back to risks: Gaston's characters may be exotic
orchids in the manure of reality, outstanding when lamenting the
demise of Vancouver Island wilderness, its infiltration by tourists,
and the results of septic-induced algae blooms, but they are less
convincing when doing things like conjuring wildlife in unlikely
places and separating orca lore from science. They have an outsider's
tendency to misplace landmarks and undersell the locals, ascribing
this trait to whites and that trait to natives, when they might
just as well see the opposite is true upon closer inspection. And
their missteps can't always be chalked up to differing homelands,
when at least some of them should know what they're looking at. As
a result, Gaston's treatment of his setting at times approaches the
sort of commonplaces his characters spend much of their time
criticizing.
I can forgive these glitches in authenticity because Gaston is a
skilled writer who has done for Vancouver Island what Michael
Crummey, Wayne Johnston, and a host of other contemporary writers
have done for Newfoundland-that is, immortalize it on the national
and probably international stage. I can and I will. But it's for
these same reasons that I'm able to do so only grudgingly. Skill
and the gift of enduring fame don't excuse the seasoned writer from
creating believable worlds for his readers, and Gaston's tendency
towards oversimplification may raise eyebrows in a readership that
undoubtedly includes a giant swath of British Columbians (not to
mention the entire literate population of Sointula, who, you can
be sure, are wondering who this guy is and why he didn't stay for
dinner).
That aside, Gaston has crafted a celebration of B.C.'s coast, heavy
with insight and all the passion of an islander's proprietary eye.
His latest book vividly captures the coast's rhythms, its natural
beauty, and its challenges. Gaston stresses repeatedly that the
book's title is ironic-that a colony of people presumptuous enough
to name their community after a nirvana-like state of spiritual
contentment, attainable for monks or Sufis alone, can only come to
failure. (In Sointula's case, the colony suffered after fires, free
love, and near starvation divided its founding members. It exists
today as a modern village, home to one of the oldest running
cooperatives in North America.) I would argue that the book's title
is also meant to be taken seriously. Despite the humour (fumbled
drug deals, fumbled sexual encounters, and fumbled masturbation in
a kayak, which is at least as Canadian as Berton's fornicating in
a canoe), Tom, Evelyn, and Peter do find what they're seeking. Like
the island's previous inhabitants, their search may have an
unanticipated end, but it's a state nevertheless approaching-dare
I say it?-harmony.
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