
Canadian poet and occasional novelist Anne Michaels, whose first novel,
Fugitive Pieces, was internationally lauded and awarded, returns some 12 years later with a sophomore effort every bit as engaging.
The Winter Vault (Knopf) is brimming with gorgeous prose and imageryfrequently cited as an example of, uh, lyric fiction (think Michael Ondaatje, John Berger, Nadeem Aslam)with lyricism such as the novel’s first sentence, Perhaps we painted on our own skin, with ochre and charcoal, long before we painted on stone. If I were not duty bound to render some explicable notice of Michaels’s fine new novel, I would be tempted to utter the banality, words cannot express
or even the Wittgensteinian formulation, Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent.
The story places two recently married Canadians, Avery and Jean, on the Nile River at a preservation project for the immense statuary and temple of Ramses at Abu Simbel (the time is circa 1964, during the construction of the Aswan Dam). Avery is an engineer, employed by this massive and intricate enterprise, and Jean is a botanist; they met while watching the seaway construction of the St. Lawrence river, grasping the irreversible impact on the lives and communities of that area. Now viewing the same process in Egypt, their idyll (living on a houseboat on the Nile) is interrupted by a tragedy that rends their marriage and sends them back to Toronto. There, Avery studies architecture and Jean takes up with a Polish émigréwhose stories of embattled Warsaw provide a distinctive dissonance against the world views of Avery and Jean.
Michaels’s narrative is a poignant and vivid illumination of the inevitability of time’s change. Or something like that. —
Robert Birnbaum, Jun. 17, 2009
3 Comments • Add Yours
Geez Robert, you like your Canadian authors. Not that I'm complaining.
I also believe the Winter Vault is her third novel.
—Ron Nurwisah, Jun. 19, 2009, at 11:43 PMRon
I appreciate the correction— what is the title of the third novel?
I do like Canadian writers. Also, Tasmanians (Richard Flanagan) Australians (Carey, Kenneally, White, Singer, Pearlman), Irish (Joseph O'Connor, Roddy Doyle, Colum Mc Cann, Patrick McCabe) and some English (Self, Barnes, De Bernieres, Dyer)...
RB
—Robert Birnbaum, Jun. 22, 2009, at 11:40 AMRe Johnson's Ressurection of... the surgical staple salesman is one ofmy all time favorite professions for a protagonist at loose ends.
—tb, Jul. 7, 2009, at 11:55 AMAdd Your Comment