| A Review of: A Game to Play on the Tracks by W.P. KinsellaIn my bottom drawer are a couple of would-be novels that that
sprinted out of the gate and roared along for 50 to a 100 pages,
then petered out. I knew I could never match the pace of those
opening pages so left them unfinished. Such is pretty much the case
with Jackson's novel, which is a wild slippery ride (a novella unto
itself) for nearly 100 pages, but then loses it's fire.
Arden is a thirtyish county singer with an aching heart and an
alcohol problem who marries a bland fellow named Nichol, has a baby,
Roy, and tries to lead a domestic life. But the pull of the road
is too much and she heads out with Roy in tow, to tour the sleaziest
of the many seedy bars in Northern BC. This is Ruby Red territory.
That novel by William Price Fox, is the only great novel I know of
about a female country singer. Arden has a horrific experience,
after which she drops her son off with his father and this is the
last we ever see of her. Unfortunately, she is such a powerful
presence, so much larger than life, that what follows is all
anticlimax. If characters were colors, Arden is scarlet, the
remainder are beige. Sections are narrated by various women who
come in contact with Nichol and Roy, including Arden's younger
sister, and a woman who contracts to build Nichol a house on one
of the Gulf Islands. The pace slows to a crawl and none of the
characters come alive, especially Nichol. There is some clever word
play; for instance, it was interesting to find that the word snide
takes an S. The long epigraphs are another matter and most could
have been cut. The final section is narrated by Roy as a teenager;
there are some possibilities when he comes into possession of the
journals Arden left behind, but by this time the author seems to
have lost interest in the project.
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