Sunday, July 24, 2016

impromptu trips / crossing the border


The fourth member of our group is checking out a book in the bookstore behind us.

All we wanted was to go for a drive, have a swim, a meal, maybe spend the night before returning home to Montreal. It was a last-minute decision. A phone call at 9:30. On our way by 11. We'd brought a change of clothes and some towels. I had my meds and toothbrush. I'm assuming the others had brought their essentials. We weren't 100% irresponsible.

I was triply delighted at the prospect of an escape from the city because it was the official release date for my new novel, Five Roses. You bet, I wanted to celebrate. Yippee! What could be grander when you've been in the city all summer than a swimming hole with a waterfall as backdrop, boulders and moss and trees all around?


So we left Montreal in search of a swimming hole. Our ringleader knew of one where he used to go swimming when he was a kid. Okay, it was across the border, but that had never been a problem when he was growing up.

The crossing we chose might have been the first mistake. Our place of origin was Montreal. Why hadn't we taken the border crossing closest to Montreal? (Why? Because construction holidays had started. We wouldn't be the only ones headed for that crossing.)

Another good reason: the swimming hole we were aiming towards was farther east, so why not cross the border farther east. Our ringleader is the fellow up top wearing the lanyard of keys around his neck. How suspicious is a man who carries his keys on his heart?

Second mistake might have been the weather forecast. Why would two middle-aged couples plan to go swimming when severe thunderstorms were forecast?

Well, the sun was shining, and we had all grown wary of weather forecasters and their melodrama.

We got to the border and told the very nice person who took our passports that we were hoping to go for a swim. We might spend the night. We were going to drive around, maybe visit one village, maybe another.

The subtext here is that we would be spending money. When you visit a foreign country, that's your role: you contribute to the economy. Generally, that's thought to be a good thing.

However, we were asked to pull aside and come into the office. We debated what we'd said that would make them want to question us further. We had no idea. We'd said we wanted to go swimming, right?

The individual who now came to speak with us asked again where we were going, what we meant to do, and how long we intended to stay. We repeated that we wanted to go swimming, that we might drive around, we weren't exactly sure where, that we didn't know when we would be returning home. Maybe today, maybe tomorrow. We volunteered that we'd brought a change of clothes. Just in case. To us, that sounded like a delightful plan.

As he persisted in asking the same questions and getting the same clearly unsatisfactory answers, one of asked what the problem was. He counted off on his fingers. One was that we didn't even know where we were going. Two was that we didn't know how long we intended to be gone.

Two red flags, he emphasized. Did we not understand that we were guests in a foreign country?

One of us said we hadn't crossed the border in a while and that requirements must have changed. Since 2001, yes, he emphasized. I could see he doubted that we even understood the reference. He was taking serious umbrage at the let's-see-where-the-road-takes-us spirit of our adventure.

So okay, okay, we backed down a little and said that we were definitively going swimming and that afterwards we would visit a certain town. That was our destination.

And? For how long?

We said we might stay the night.

"Might" was the wrong answer.

But what if, one of us asked, we said we were going to stay the night and then we didn't?

Another wrong thing to say.

I believe the repeated reference to being guests in a foreign country was meant to underline that we weren't supposed to think this country was ours. We didn't. However, it seemed we weren't acting like guests were supposed to act either.

One of us said that if we weren't going to be allowed into the country, that was fine.

I sort of moaned because now I had my heart set on a swim.

Another said, okay, we understood now that we needed to have an itinerary before being allowed to be guests in a foreign country. Next time we would have an itinerary.

At one point all four of us were talking in an attempt to assure the officer of our harmlessness--while we were also telegraphing ???!!!@^^!!??? at each other.

Once we'd made it clear that we now UNDERSTOOD that we should have an itinerary when visiting a foreign country, we were allowed on our way.


Rain started while we were in the water, but by then we felt refreshed. We dried off as well as we could and drove to St. Albans where we bought a book, some handmade soap, and had warm soup and a meal. (Contributing to the economy.)

Our friend--with the keys over his heart--gave me his green linen shirt (XXL) to keep me warm because my own shirt was wet. The shirt was so large I was enveloped in it. Had I planned the trip, I might have packed a sweater or a dry shirt. The green shirt, though so huge, was much nicer.


We drove to Burlington where we contributed yet more to the economy. We walked by Lake Champlain. Throughout the day we had one impromptu idea after another. Maybe we should take the ferry across the lake and return to Montreal from New York state. How about French fries, even though we'd already eaten? How about a drink on a terrace overlooking the lake with the mountains in the distance? What about ice cream?


The border official had made us aware of the tenuous and dangerous nature of our venture. Nothing was planned! Who knew where we might end up? What if we'd decided to keep driving all the way to Maine?

We all agreed it was a grand day--and wasn't it sad that the border official would probably never have one like it.




Sunday, July 17, 2016

maritime abstract art

It's summertime in Montreal--skirts, tank tops, and sunscreen--but a few weeks ago, I was wearing a jacket while walking by the sea in the Gaspé. 
Today I'm looking at the pics I took and thinking that if I were a visual artist, I would figure out how to turn closeups of rock, sea grass, moss, sand, and kelp into abstract art. 
























Monday, July 11, 2016

new book / great start

Despite the general sluggishness of summer, when all you want is to drink something cool and laze about, Five Roses has been getting off to a good start.

Lookee-look! at this wonderful review in the Montreal Review of Books. 
http://mtlreviewofbooks.ca/v4/reviews/five-roses/

They hosted a well-attended launch party for the anniversary of their 50th issue at the Drawn & Quarterly bookstore on July 8th. Myself, Xue Yiwei, and Sylvain Neuvel read.

I wish I'd had the presence of mind to take a picture of the inside of the bookstore--brick walls lined with books--but I was too excited. However, before the reading I took a picture of the front window where Five Roses gets chummy with Rudie Nudie.

An excerpt from Five Roses has been published in the US in the handsomely produced magazine, Apogee. There's a special pleasure to seeing your words on good paper, the pages illustrated with fine artwork.


Also last week, I was invited to the Pointe division of the Legion Hall where I was entertained with a wealth of stories about the Pointe from a couple of decades ago--bank robberies, the flatbed truck heaped with Christmas gifts from the West End gang (that was), a three-shift restaurant to feed the rail yard workers. All "for my next book."

As a footnote to the review above, here is how you set a table for breakfast.


And though I never made a cake this pretty when I was a child (to this day, decorating is not my forte), I have this picture permanently filed in the same compartment of my memory as Popeye and Felix the Cat. 



Wednesday, July 6, 2016

gardening / taking a break / watering the words

I spend a lot of hours per day staring at paper or a computer screen. With luck, there are words there.
To take a break, I walk or cycle.
Or visit with friends.
Or watch a movie.
I read too, but that doesn't count as taking a break from words.
Or I water my garden. I belong to the douse-the-soil school. A lot of my gardening neighbours prefer to spray the leaves. Spraying is more graceful. I stand there with the hose and smell the wet soil. Listen to the trains go by on the embankment. The birds in the trees, the wind in the leaves. There's a wooded area beside the plots. We have an amazing community garden in Pointe St-Charles.

Hot peppers that I plan to preserve in olive oil

beets in the sun
I keep cutting back the fennel greenery to see if that will make the bulbs grow
The biggest tomato to date
Snow peas. I can never see the pods and have finally realized I have to pick them by feel. 
Lebanese cukes. They're growing.

There are other ways to spend time away from words but taking care of plants is good. And soon enough the tomatoes and cucumbers and beets and fennel will be ready to harvest. (A lot faster than a book.) 
I'm also growing radishes, lettuce, arugula, red onion, rhubarb, eggplant, basil, green beans, and zucchini, but that's it for the pictures. 


Sunday, July 3, 2016

fun things happening for Five Roses

It's only early July and already fun things are happening for Five Roses.

My press, Dundurn, made this lovely map to locate events in the novel.


As a point of reference, here's the one I sent them:

Not ready for a career as a cartographer, am I?

Though this reminds me of the time an eminent person asked where I lived. I drew a map of the island of Montreal. (That's right. Montreal is on an island in the St. Lawrence River.) Then I located the point of land known as Pointe St-Charles.


She gasped and said, "You live in the nipple!"

So the map above is an expanded nipple.

First the snazzy map, and then a soft package arrived which didn't seem at all paper or book-related. But look! A cloth panel of my book cover which I've tacked it to my study door.


That, above the panel, is a Little Nell knocker a friend brought from Edinburgh. We both compare notes as to what does and doesn't convince housemates that we're working.

R found this card of a Five Roses flour beach mat. And she's reading a book! (Though how she manages to be comfortable with a book in that pose, I don't know.)


And here's me holding Five Roses wearing a Five Roses T-shirt, standing in front of the FARINE FIVE ROSES sign on the Lachine Canal.


Where can you buy the book? In Montreal at the Paragraphe Bookstore, Drawn & Quarterly, and the downtown Indigo. In Toronto at the Indigo in the Eaton Centre. In Whitby at Chapters. If you know of other bookstores, please drop me a line.
You can order it directly from the publisher at https://www.dundurn.com/books/Five-Roses
It's available on ibooks and will be available at Amazon on July 23rd. If you buy it on Amazon, do please rate the book or write a review. That really helps. A Goodreads or Library Thing rating is also grand.

All right, that's enough about the book. Next post I'm going to write about my garden.