The Voice Is the Story: Conversations with Canadian Writers of Short Fiction
by Laura Kruk, Laurie Kruk ISBN: 0889627983
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: The Voice is the Story by Jeremy LalondeAs I'm sure you already know, The Last Crossing by Guy Vanderhaeghe
won this year's CBC Canada Reads competition. For the purposes of
this review, I'm less interested in Vanderhaeghe's success than the
manner in which Alice Munro's The Love of a Good Woman was summarily
shelved on the second day of the contest. The deciding vote belonged
to the mediator, Bill Richardson, who claimed it was too difficult
to contrast Munro's collection of short stories with the four novels
in the competition.
This is an interesting claim, given that the four novelists (Thomas
King, Monique Proulx, Mordecai Richler and Guy Vanderhaeghe) have
written numerous short stories over the course of their careers,
crossing between genres with remarkable alacrity. Keep that old
Sesame Street game, one-of-these-things-is-not-like-the-others, in
mind; difference in this context is subtly encoded as inferiority-you're
different, you lose, in other words.
The fact is, Richardson may very well like short stories-but until
we set up new narrative ground rules, the short story and collections
of short stories will continue to suffer through unfair comparisons
with the novel. What we need, in short, is a definition of generic
difference that accounts for the individual strengths of the short
story and the novel. To this end, Guy Vanderhaeghe has developed a
working definition of his own:
"great short stories are chiseled and cut and refined and
faceted in a way that makes them-and this is not a dismissive
phrase-like a fine cameo. Whereas novels I think have to have a
certain amount of baggy trousers to them. In fact, novels actually
have to have slack stretches in them, and the pacing is very different
from that of the short story."
The Voice is the Story persistently champions the short story as a
genre. Concerns regarding short fiction emerge naturally in this
book-perhaps because the writers' talk is balanced against stories
that are intended to serve as illustrative examples. The Voice of
the Story: Conversations with Canadian Writers of Short Fiction
comprises ten interviews with Canadian writers: Edna Alford, Sandra
Birdsell, Joan Clark, Timothy Findley, Elisabeth Harvor, Jack
Hodgins, Alistair MacLeod, Jane Rule, Carol Shields and Guy
Vanderhaeghe. Laurie Kruk conducts all of the interviews and, as
the title suggests, these are conversations-that is, Kruk assumes
an active speaking role in the proceedings-that take short fiction
as their focal point.
Let me state the obvious: this book won't have a wide readership,
but it will appeal to anyone interested in the short story as a
genre or the particular writers involved. With the exception of the
Hodgins and Vanderhaeghe interviews, all of this material has
previously appeared in Canadian journals. However, since many of
these journals are not widely available, this edition represents a
significant contribution to scholarship on Canadian short fiction.
Most of the writers involved are widely known for their novels;
perhaps as a consequence, other interviews with these same writers
frequently dwell on their novels to the exclusion of their short
stories. This explains why, for example, there is no interview
with Alice Munro in this edition: since Munro works almost exclusively
in the short story form, there is no shortage of material that
details her impressions of the genre and her own stories.
In her introduction, Kruk sketches a brief history of the short
story in Canada that, while not quite on par with essays by Frank
Davey ("Genre Subversion and the Canadian Short Story")
and W.H. New ("Back to the Future"), will serve as a
useful introduction for most students. Researchers will appreciate
the index to the conversations that lists the names of authors,
artists and other public figures (the index to one interview lists
Boy George and Bob Newhart; you'll have to guess which one) as well
as the titles of individual stories, books and other media.
During the interviews, Kruk doesn't limit the writers to discussing
their short stories, but she does make sure they say something about
them (Jack Hodgins, for instance, is far more interested in talking
about his novels). Edna Alford discusses the particular problems
that the writer of linked short stories faces; she recounts how her
publisher begged her to transform A Sleep Full of Dreams into a
novel (a move she resisted). Besides an affinity for the short
story as a genre, these writers are also united in their resistance
to "being labeled," "pigeonholed," or
"compartmentalized" as short story writers, as regional
writers, as queer writers (to name a few examples).
It seems to me that The Voice is the Story also runs the risk of
being pigeonholed, as a book "of little interest to anyone
besides historians and graduate students seeking to pad their theses
with quotation" (the words belong to Globe and Mail reviewer
Melanie Little). What troubles me most about this claim is the way
it rests on the observation that "Many of the interviewsare
not contemporary" (there is no argument on the point that Kruk
envisions a largely academic readership). While some of the
interviews in The Voice is the Story date from as far back as 1990,
the issues they raise remain astonishingly current.
This book captures something of the lively debate that surrounds
the status of the short story in Canada--a debate that is very much
ongoing and shows no signs of abatement.
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