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Fiction Short Stories (single Author)

Every Minute Is a Suicide

Stories

by (author) Bruce McDougall

Publisher
Porcupine's Quill
Initial publish date
Oct 2014
Category
Short Stories (single author), Literary
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780889843776
    Publish Date
    Oct 2014
    List Price
    $22.95

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

A collection of short stories centred on a father's disappearance and his son's decades-long journey toward answers.

About the author

Michel Cormier is the Executive Director of News and Current Affairs at Radio-Canada. He was the CBC and Radio-Canada correspondent in Moscow and Paris and, from 2006 to 2010, in Beijing, where he covered events such as the Sichuan earthquake and the 2008 Olympics and followed China's meteoric rise to economic superpower. Cormier has also reported on major events in Europe, the war in Afghanistan, and the deaths of Yasser Arafat and Pope John Paul II. His coverage of the toppling of Eduard Shevardnadze in Georgia resulted in a Gemini Award nomination.Cormier is the author of four books, including La Russie des illusions, which was shortlisted for the Governor-General's Award for non-fiction in 2007. He has also won both the Anick and Judith-Jasmin journalism awards. His latest book, The Legacy of Tiananmen Square, was originally published in French as Les héritiers de Tiananmen.

Bruce McDougall's profile page

Awards

  • Short-listed, Independent Publisher (IPPY) awards
  • Winner, eLit Awards
  • Short-listed, ForeWord IndieFab Book of the Year Award

Editorial Reviews

This book reads like memory itself, a mixture of obviously key moments and seemingly innocuous ones that take on meaning later.

With Every Minute is a Suicide, Bruce McDougall succeeds in the difficult task of putting together a series of stories that track how a man's life was influenced by his parents splitting up when he was young. McDougall adeptly changes perspective, using different narrators and reflections from different times, all while maintaining his evocative prose and making the characters' journeys relatable but not predictable.

McDougall tells his story using a clever and effective structure. The first and longest story in the collection, "Mom Takes a Husband," ushers readers through the life cycle of an unsuccessful relationship?introducing the backstories of both partners, describing their courtship and marriage, and detailing how the husband's vices and violence toward his wife cause her to take the kids and move away. A few of the pivotal scenes in that story, such as the father's last attempt to see his children before committing suicide, are told again in future sections, but from the perspective of different narrators who flesh out the details.

The vast majority of the stories are told from the perspective of the couple's younger child, a son who was close with his father and still a boy when they were separated, but who is also very aware of the problems between his parents. As the book goes along, the son becomes more aware of how his whole life story was influenced by his mother's decision and his father's flaws. In one memorable story, he describes his mother and uncle arguing about which childhood neighbors lived on which streets and reflects on how the fight was really about the uncle having introduced the former couple.

By jumping in time, McDougall is able to make some interesting narrative choices. The narrator's two marriages are discussed, but only after their demises. He ascribes meaning to childhood experiences in retrospect. Combined with McDougall's strong description and honest dialogue, this approach makes Every Minute is a Suicide a worthy collection and a compelling read.

Foreword Reviews

'Every Minute is a Suicide by Bruce McDougall layers its stories one atop the other like transparencies, finding its form by accretion. Its prose is comfortable and confident as it takes up the voice and the posture of a storyteller, and it is patient also, growing with its themes and characters. It is the work of a skilled and capable writer.'

Jeremy Luke Hill