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Literary Collections Canadian

Welcome to Canada

by (author) David Carpenter

Publisher
Porcupine's Quill
Initial publish date
Nov 2009
Category
Canadian, Short Stories (single author)
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780889843202
    Publish Date
    Nov 2009
    List Price
    $27.95

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

Get out of the house, get out of town, go west, go north, head for the wilderness and suffer like a true Canadian. David Carpenter will take you there. His prose has more pop than Orville Reddenbacker.

About the author

David Carpenter spent his first twenty-three years in Edmonton, working during the summers as a car hop, a driver for Brewster Rocky Mountain Grayline, a fish stocker, a trail guide, and a folksinger. He read French and German at the University of Alberta to indifferent effect. He graduated and taught high school in Edmonton until 1965, then migrated south to do an M.A. in English at the University of Oregon. He returned to Canada in 1967 and once again taught school until the summer of 1969, when he enrolled for his Ph. D. at the University of Alberta.

Between 1985 and 1988 Carpenter published a series of novellas and long stories -- Jokes for the Apocalypse, Jewels and God's Bedfellows. Jokes for the Apocalypse was runner up for the Gerald Lampert Award, and his novella The Ketzer won first prize in the Descant Novella Contest.

In 1997 Carpenter turned to writing full-time. A first novel, Banjo Lessons was published in 1997 and won the City of Edmonton Book Prize. During the early nineties he also finished the last of his personal and literary essays which make up Writing Home, his first collection of nonfiction. The essays explore his engagements with such writers as Richard Ford, the French writer/scientist Georges Bugnet, and the late Raymond Carver. Several of these pieces won prizes for literary journalism and for humour in the Western Magazine Awards. One of these essays was featured on CBC Radio's `Ideas`. He brought out a second book of essays about life around home, a month-by-month salute to the seasons entitled Courting Saskatchewan. It won the Saskatchewan Book Award for nonfiction.

Throughout the years he has always been a passionate outdoorsman and environmentalist. This abiding love of lakes, trails, streams and campsites translates into city life in Saskatoon as well, where he lives with his wife, artist Honor Kever, and their son Will.

David Carpenter's profile page

Awards

  • Runner-up, ForeWord Magazine Book of the Year
  • Short-listed, Saskatchewan Book Award (Saskatoon)
  • Winner, Independent Publisher (IPPY) awards
  • Short-listed, Saskatchewan Book Award (Fiction)
  • Short-listed, Saskatchewan Book Award (Book of the Year)

Editorial Reviews

Understated and poignant, David Carpenter's Welcome to Canada: Stories collects a number of flawed and beautiful characters who illuminate the fragility of human nature. The isolation, unpredictability, and grace of the Canadian wilderness sets the atmosphere and tone for these brilliantly crafted short stories, while the characters, many of whom are city folks confronted with the life and inhabitants of the Canadian bush, discover the meaning of redemption in situations that challenge their beliefs.

The stories, a combination of short and long form, illustrate Carpenter's uncanny ear for humor and reflect how geography and culture are reflected in the dialects and cadences of speech. In the title story, 'Welcome to Canada,' Carpenter superbly depicts the phonetic quirks of an adventure-seeking Texan named Lester, whose interactions with the locals are infused with the folksy levity of a social misfit. By the end of the story, Lester's unlikely relationship with his local fishing guide reveals the wistful sensitivity that lies beneath Lester's humor. In 'The Ketzer,' the short, terse sentences of the Potts family are fraught with emotional nuance. The longest story in the collection, 'Luce,' introduces a diverse cast of characters, including tough kids, tippling housewives, and a giant fish named Adolph. Carpenter's finesse with human frailty is at its most compelling when he looks at the world through the eyes of a twelve-year-old boy during a summer vacation. The most harrowing story, 'Turkle,' renders the harsh Canadian winter a capable and unforgiving opponent to the story's main character, a tough and stubborn father of three young children.

Carpenter's characters seek acceptance and connection, no matter how different they may be from one another. In 'The Ketzer,' Flora, a young woman in a family of hunting men, strives in vain to be seen: 'While her brothers talked hunting at the far end of the table, Flora, getting drunk with unaccustomed speed, began to clamour for her father's attention. He would not even look her way. Then they began to refer to her in the third person and this she could never stand.'

Flora is a typical Carpenter character: someone who desires to be seen as one is, without apologies. This wish propels many of the characters' choices and underscores a thread of desperation that runs through the stories.

The omnipresent Canadian wilderness; the unexpected pairings of people from different social, cultural, and economic classes; and the eccentricity of characters make this collection a testament to Carpenter's skill.

Welcome to Canada: Stories will be a pleasure for short story aficionados and for those who respect the beauty and brutality of nature. Elegantly bound with exquisite paper and typesetting, this book is satisfying, profound, and entertaining.

ForeWord Reviews

'The latest book by Saskatoon author David Carpenter is a collection of novellas and short stories that succeeds on a number of levels. Welcome to Canada features a landscape that is richly imagined (or perhaps remembered); it is a place where people and nature play an equal role, with the weight of importance shifting smoothly back and forth between them.'

Saskatoon Star Phoenix

'Spare and often colloquial, Carpenter's writing invites comparisons with Ernest Hemingway and Thomas McGuane, but his voice is his own. Despite the fact that it is one of the less-travelled areas of our literary landscape, Carpenter Country is a place well worth visiting.'

Quill & Quire

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