| A Review of: Belonging by Sharon Abron DracheThe leap from memoir to fiction is not as large as most readers of
both genres believe, and Isabel Huggan sets out to prove this in a
highly idosyncratic collection, whose bulk, 15 passages, are memoir.
Like a sledge hammer, three short stories tacked on at the end of
Huggan's documentary odyssey endeavor to prove the significance of
the close and fragile connection between the emotional responses
to selective contemplation of the past and the stream of consciousness
imaginings called fiction.
With the reader as witness, Belonging becomes a rigourous and brave
shaping of remembrance to name and secure for Huggan and her readers
that intensely private place she calls home.
While Belonging traces the travels of Isabel and her husband, Bob,
as they move from country to country, the people and places Huggan
recalls are framed by her fastidious awareness of the march of time,
reminding readers that each minute we live, no matter where and
with whom, becomes history and therefore the sacred trust of any
recorder, be he/she a non-fiction or fiction wordsmith. A tall
order!
Only in the final three short stories are the names of the protagonist
couple fabricated, and the first two offerings especially, "The
Window" and "Arnica" are unquestionably based on the
travel experiences of Isabel and Bob that preceed the fiction
segment.
The third story, "Starting with a Chair" is marginally
different in that a simple piece of furniture evokes access to the
fictional narrative, which is a compilation of selected memories
showcased to illustrate how interconnected our lives are, especially
when built around the same physical thing, in this case a rocking
chair, passed on from one generation to the next-a deceptively
simple concluding piece for Huggan's hybrid Belonging collection.
Like the symbolic rocking chair, the non-fiction portion begins
with the shock of Isabel learning that Bob's work for an NGO will
take their family to Kenya, and subsequently to the Philippines,
and France. And after retiring, Bob also decides that he wishes to
settle permanently in the foothills of the Cevennes mountains in
the south of France. The shock for Isabel is entailed in leaving
Canada, and the reader quickly discovers why all the places Isabel
visits and resides in are destined to become home.
While home is clearly where the heart is, home is also most definitely
Canada-the towns of Elmira, Ontario, where Isabel was born and
raised, Belleville, where she and Bob lived for seven years, two
years after they were married, and Ottawa where the couple spent
several years before leaving behind Canada as their permanent
residence in 1987.
Huggan writes: "And so you learn to live with mal de pays as
with chronic illness or disability, you salt your days with nostalgie.
Then finally you wake up and compare yourself to the millions of
displaced people in the world who will never see their homes again,
and you feel ashamed and you stop."
The Huggans' newest home in the south of France, Mas Blanc, which
they purchased in 1993, is the choice of Huggan's Scottish-born
husband to whom she has been married since 1970. However, after
reading Belonging, I cannot attribute this choice to Bob alone,
because implicit in Isabel's writings is that her most valued home
is the couple's togetherness. Yet, in her 15 non-fiction entries
Isabel nevers writes openly about the their closeness as a couple,
though their love for each other jumps out at the reader in the
three fiction entries at Belonging's conclusion.
It is obvious that Huggan owes much of her development as a writer
to her marriage and the extensive travel the marriage has brought
with it, but still, it is when she is utterly alone as a
writer-in-residence in Hobart, Tasmania, that she experiences her
truest sense of home.
At the end of this residency Huggan stayed for a week in a beach
house belonging to a Canadian and English couple, both of them
writers. She records: "The house, set on a rise overlooking a
huge bay, has walls of glass, creating the sensation that even
indoors you are part of the sky and the sea and that they are part
of you. It is different from Mas Blanc-built of stone to protect
you from the world rather than allowing it entry-as a dwelling could
possibly be."
It is in this glass house that Huggan discovers a book of essays
by a Buddhist priest, Kenko, who was also known by his layname Urabe
no Kaneyoshi. Between 1330 and 1332, he pasted to the walls of his
cottage 243 fragments of his view of the world, which were totally
infused with his Buddhist beliefs referring to the impermanence of
all things, the endless cycle of birth, growth and death, and the
vanity of human achievements and posessions.
Huggan learns from Kenko the value of not imposing a pattern on
experience and the importance of not transforming reality. Yet,
between her many destinations as she has travelled the world, and
in her quest for finding a safe haven to call home, she has tried
to do the opposite, because of her obsessive need for naming, putting
into words the innermost thoughts of her heart.
Belonging asserts proudly that Isabel Huggan's journey is Isabel
Huggan's history and as her readers we are invited to share it.
Certainly, this reader was mesmirized by her intimate and encompassing
diary-the best part was I didn't even have to pack a suitcase.
While Huggan's life as described in Belonging is one of privilege
and many blessings, her insatiable curiosity and cautiously crafted
prose reminds her readers that we are all blessed, particularly as
reflected in the final two sentences of her story, "Staring
with a Chair": "Everything belongs right where it is.
There is nothing in our lives that doesn't fit."
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