Category Archives: Julia Kochuk

Real-life events inform Gaston’s fiction

Bill Gaston’s newest novel, The World, was released this fall by Hamish Hamilton. Gaston’s fiction has received many prizes, including nomination for the Giller Prize, the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize, and the Governor General’s Award. Gaston lives in Victoria, where he’s Department Chair and professor at the University of Victoria. Julia Kochuk discussed Gaston’s new fiction via an email conversation. The novel knits together five tragic and beautiful stories that are full of wisdom and the inescapable complexities of the human condition. The World (355 pages, $32) will be launched in Victoria on October 17th at 6 p.m. at the Bard and the Banker.

What inspired you to write this novel?

Strangely enough, a house fire. Much like Stuart in the novel, I ignited my sun deck, and it spread, and in the morning, the whole side of the house was on fire. I did my research, you might say. So the start of the novel is non-fiction. After that, my writer’s imagination takes over.

The novel is broken down into three parts, told from each of the distinct voices of the three characters, as well as the researched strand of a woman living in the D’Arcy Island leper colony. How did the writing process differ in writing a novel with multiple points of view and voice from a novel with a single protagonist?

I once saw an interview with the actor Kirk Douglas, who had just written a novel. He went on to say that writing the novel was almost identical to being an actor, in that he got to play all the parts and also [be] the director. That rang true, to me. Writing a voice is much like being a method actor, in that you occupy, to the best of your ability, someone else. So that’s the difference. With a multi-voiced novel, you have to stay in the proximity of several voices, not just one.

How did you decide to structure this novel and did you run into any problems in doing so?

It wasn’t ever a “decision,” as it was a process that lasted three or four years. It’s complicated. Basically, the structure isn’t conventional and involves both the seemingly random intersection of lives as well as the nature of fiction. There are fictions within fictions in this fiction of mine. Books within books. There are five independent stories, but they all somehow intersect! And I hope that in saying it this way I’m not making people not want to read this book.

It seems a lot of research went into writing this novel: the way a body falls apart due to esophageal cancer, the way the mind breaks from Alzheimer’s, the way leprosy crumbles limbs and spirits. How did you research these many strands and how did you balance the research with fiction?

Well, as with the house fire, my own life did provide me with lots of research. I’ve had both throat cancer and Alzheimer’s in my immediate family. Nuff said about that. Most leper colony information came from an excellent book, A Measure of Value, by local writer Chris Yorath — though much of the leper colony story is whimsical, that is, imagination, being a fiction written by one of the novel’s characters. In fact, the female leper’s story was written by a character written by a character written by me. (Again, reader, please don’t run away!)

The World” is an ambitious title. How does the world within the novel reflect the larger world outside of it?

Well, it’s a seemingly ambitious title. A glance at the cover immediately reveals the title’s irony. The book is about small worlds — not just a tiny leper colony, but also our individual, private worlds. It’s also about the world that is our house that can burn down, and the world of our body that can die, and the world of our mind that can lose all awareness of itself, to dementia. The title is really not about the larger world at all.

Julia Kochuk is a fourth-year writing student at the University of Victoria.

 

Turn Up the Volume, Crank Down the Windows

Cadillac Couches

By Sophie B. Watson
Brindle & Glass. 217 pp. $19.95

Reviewed by Julia Kochuk

In her witty debut novel Cadillac Couches, Sophie B. Watson sets scenes of Canada’s cross-country landscape to a playlist of nineties favourites. Watson tells the journey of two “foul mouthed, Albertan, wannabe Edwardians” in their early twenties, chasing music and purpose .
It’s summertime in the late nineties under the prairie skies of Edmonton. The air is laced with Dan Bern and the scent of fresh onion cakes. Anxiety-ridden Annie is stuck in inertia: watching, not living; a fan, not a player. She nurses her broken heart with red wine, music, and cigarettes smoked on her “Cadillac couch,” a vintage couch she bought “for twenty-five bucks at the Salvation Army on the north side of the river one lucky Saturday.”
The inertia and heatbreak make Annie antsy. She must get her mind off her ex, and her butt off the couch. She must make real-life rock star Hawksley Workman fall in love with her. She decides a road trip to the Montreal Folk Festival, with her très chic friend Isobel, is in order. Hawksley will be performing.
Will Annie gain control of her anxieties? Will she get over Sullivan? Will she get the chance to meet and/or marry Hawksley? What is Annie’s purpose, her holy grail? Will she ever find it?
Sophie B. Watson is an award-winning freelance writer, published in several magazines including Canadian Dimension, Briarpatch Magazine, and Legacy Magazine. This is her first novel.
Cadillac Couches reveals Watson’s ability to create truthful character and voice: Annie is old enough to pay her own bills, but youthfully naïve enough to hope “sexy-ass troubadour” Hawksley Workman could pick her from a swarm and fall madly in love with her. Cadillac Couches effectively represents the stage between teen and adult: that in-between stage where responsibilities are low and expectations for life are high.
The novel unfolds chronologically, starting with the escape from Edmonton in a beat-up 1972 pink Volkswagen Bug named Rosimund. The action is staccatoed with flashbacks and daydreams, mirroring the road trip mind. Each chapter opens with a sketch and lyrics, as if you were doodling in your notebook and fiddling with the radio from the passenger seat of the car.
While life looks rosy through Rosimund’s windows, the story sometimes moves faster than the poor Bug can travel: the novel is packed full of road kill, fuzzy navel drunken nights, high school memories, a pregnancy scare, and many minor characters. However, this still rings true to the true road trip nature, where scenes flash by windows and people are forgotten as you pull away from gas stations.
Cadillac Couches is a marvelously quirky and enjoyable novel. It is as much a ballad to Canada, as it is to music. It captures all you feel about the scenery passing by, the songs you know the words to. It reminds you that you can escape, but also that seasons change; you can come home more you than you were when you left.

Julia Kochuk is a fourth-year writing student at the University of Victoria.