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FISHING FOR BIRDS by Linda Quennec

FISHING FOR BIRDS

by Linda Quennec

Pub Date: July 7th, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-77133-613-0
Publisher: Inanna Publications

In the wake of a tragedy, a Canadian woman leaves her job and home for the solace of a small island in Quennec’s debut novel.

After her husband, Jeff, and both of his parents die in a car accident, Kate is left floating through life like an “apparition,” emotionally unmoored. She boldly decides to leave her job as a newspaper editor and her home in her native Vancouver Island, British Columbia, for nearby Britannia Island in the Salish Sea, in search of peace and some measure of rejuvenation. Once there, however, she’s forced to face the grim reality that her marriage was in trouble long before Jeff died and that he may have been unfaithful to her—and the darker truth that she may be culpable in his death. Kate feels encouraged in her soul-searching after she meets Ivy, a fascinating woman in her twilight years who’s “strong and vital in so many ways, yet stuck in a body that didn't even work well enough to eat independently.” Ivy relates a past crisis of her own: In 1926, just before she attended college, she visited her German grandparents at Isla de Piños, a small Cuban island caught in the country’s struggle for independence from the United States. There, Ivy began a torrid affair with Emilio, a young Cuban, but her grandparents strongly disapproved, citing the unbridgeable cultural chasm that separated them. Quennec sensitively probes Kate’s and Ivy’s respective romantic crises, with the former seeming to seek a reprieve from life and the latter, a recommitment to it. The author conveys the story from three distinct perspectives: Kate’s, Ivy’s, and Kate’s mother Nora’s. Over the course of the novel, Quennec delicately exposes Kate’s deepest fear that, despite her lust for life, she is, in fact, unworthy of finding happiness in it. At a dinner party with other women, for instance, Kate thinks, “Soon enough they will see her for who she is, a frightened, unworldly child. She can almost predict the onset of their disappointment once she’s revealed enough of herself.” Quennec has a gimlet eye for this kind of unexpressed terror, which she ably portrays when Kate meets Luke, an earnest environmental consultant who takes a real interest in her. Ivy’s past is unraveled in a similarly poignant manner, as the young woman frets that she’s as narrowly provincial as her grandparents are—a theory that Emilio offers her, none too generously. Nora’s plight, however, is considerably less engrossing and certainly less dramatic than the others’, as her conventional married life is upended by the unprovoked attentions of a male admirer. In fact, her flat, formulaic narrative is so incongruent with the other two that it seems misplaced. Also, the author unfurls the plot at a pace so languorous that it may lose some readers’ attention at times. Overall, though, her novel offers an astute examination of the despair engendered by solitude and of the paradoxical consolations it delivers.

A slow-paced but thoughtful tale that will reward patient readers.