| 2004 Amazon.ca/Books in Canada. First Novel Award: Judges' Comments by CAMILLA GIBB
As a judge, you sincerely hope you're going to like/love the books you're asked to
consider. Let's face it, since much of your summer reading has been determined for you,
you at least want to enjoy it. But even if you do enjoy each one in its own way, as I did,
you don't want to end up feeling they are all good, good enough, but none great, none
worthy of being set apart and awarded.
But my job has been easy, thanks to Colin McAdam. Some Great Thing is some great
thing indeedùa constantly surprising, risk-taking wonder. I've not read something with
such an original voice since Nicola Barker's IMPAC-award winning book Wide Open.
McAdam explores the subtleties of differences in class, education and culture as played
out against the bigger ideals of building a nationùits suburbs on one hand, its civil
service on another. His skill is evident in the structural sophistication of the story, and
his confidence in his ability is clear in his assumption of the reader's intelligence, even
where he takes the risk of confusing the reader.
McAdam is in total controlùeach character is the unique owner of his/her language and
point of viewùa mastery most powerfully evident in his hypnotic use of monologue and
extended dialogue. McAdam makes me, as a writer, excited about language; as a reader,
he simply blows me away.
An honourable mention has to go to Ibi Kaslik for Skinny, a tender, charming novel
about the coming-of-age of two sisters that has just enough bite to keep it fresh. Like
McAdam, Kaslik distinguishes herself with an arresting and original voice that makes
novel use of language. Her compassion for her characters is heartfelt and
unselfconscious.
Plot suffers though, from periodic disjunctures, narration which is too directive in parts,
and occasional inconsistencies in character. Still, Skinny is a compulsive read with much
to recommend it and certainly deserving of more attention.
At the risk of neglecting the other three books on the shortlist, each of which has its own
merits, I wanted to make some comment on eachùin no particular order. First, Arthur
Motyer's What's Remembered. This book has stayed with me, or rather the feeling of it
has. There's such an aura of sadness about this bookùa fictional memoir of the life of a
gay man in an era of necessary secrecyùbut it's a story that seems to have missed its
moment, somehow. It belongs among other gay memoirs of the past, in large part
because of the formality of the narration and point of view, and while a painful reminder
of the struggles for acceptance and recognition, it's difficult to connect it to the present
era and the celebration of gay lives and unions in Canada.
Bishop's Road by Catherine Safer, the story of the women in a St. John's boarding house,
is a genre-crossing mix of local history, mystery and magic realism. Safer's prose style is
unique, buoyant and often funny, but while Safer is a great storyteller with a keen sense
of character, I was conscious of the effort behind the narration on occasion.
Finally, Sunday Afternoon, by David Elias is a curious but engaging read about the
inhabitants of a Mennonite town who are witness to the planting of nuclear missiles just
across the US border. While much could be drawn out here about that conflicted space
between global political movements and the tradition-bound inhabitants of a small
Canadian town in the 1960s, the tension of the historical moment is diffused by attempts
to offer insights into the heads of too many characters.
But as I said at the outset, there was no contest here. You had me at "Kathleen on
Wednesday", Mr. McAdam.
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