In blog-as-confessional mode today: it’s always gratifying to signal what’s been accomplished, but less gratifying to consider what was begun in high spirits and never completed.
In terms of the done, I refer to items along the right aisle of this site, where I’ve just updated “Recent essays and stories.” I was pleased that “Burial Grounds” found a home in the latest Prairie Fire. This piece grew out of concerns, when we first moved from Manitoba to British Columbia, about where I would be buried someday. All those years in Winnipeg, I’d had my eye on the beautiful Elmwood Cemetery and now we’d left it behind. (I know, I know, I worry about odd things.) I was delighted that The New Quarterly took “On the Memory Set,” a reflection launched by once trying to write a play.
And, most recently, a review of Cameron Dueck’s fine book, Menno Moto, at Mennonite Historian (pg.11.)
But the unfinished, the abandoned! Some time ago I made a list of these and it wasn’t short. This morning, needing a binder, I emptied accumulated notes for my Year of Reading Margaret Laurence project (2019), which I referenced back in December. Of four formidable women writers who shaped my sense of Canadian writing — Margaret Laurence, Mavis Gallant, Margaret Atwood, Carol Shields — it’s Margaret Laurence to whom I’m most drawn. I suppose I dreamed of one of those “annualist” manuscripts, even though I find them somewhat pretentious.
I glanced through the notes, remembered how much I enjoyed reading Laurence’s African stories for the first time and two collections of her correspondence (with publisher Jack McClelland, with friend Adele Wiseman), as well as re-reading some of her novels. I also read James King’s slightly irritating biography of Laurence. I noticed in the notes that I wondered whether she would have liked me. (Another odd worry, I know.) She didn’t suffer fools gladly, as her letters attest. It was the question of my own identity as writer, I think; a hope for resonance. But it’s the stories, not the personality, that remains. Their passion, their language. (Just one image from a story in The Tomorrow Tamer, by way of illustration: “the children darted, velvety with dust.” Which makes me ache with pleasure.)
While my admiration for Margaret Laurence’s work was affirmed, I lost interest in continuing the project. But if there’s not enough wool for a blanket, I offer a narrow scarf, namely encouragement to read, or re-read, Margaret Laurence. She’s worth it. Still, and again.
Margaret Laurence is one of my favourites, too.
Love your expression “if there’s not enough wool for a blanket let me offer a narrow scarf.” Oh yes, “what was begun in high spirits but never completed…the unfinished, the abandoned!” Noose around my neck!
I figured there would be others with the same experience! 🙂
I love the way you always get to the nub of things with both insight and self-deprecating humor. Of a kind that includes the rest of us. My Canadian author reading has been far too slight!
Thank you Shirley! My Margaret Laurence is your Willa Cather perhaps.
I smiled when you mentioned worrying about “odd things.” Where to be buried…a very real concern. Your word picture “if there’s not enough wool for a blanket, I offer a narrow scarf” ranks right up there with the most famous of authors.You were able to discontinue a project and not feel compelled to complete it. It inspires me to settle for the “scarf” and not waste time and energy trying to get the “blanket” completed.
Eunice, I’m smiling too. Your comments are the best! Thank you!