b. And yet, and yet, Winnipeg residents do wind up visiting here. The woman above came with her cousin, who had migrated to Madison, and is a regular browser at the store. And recently, Sarah McNally, the proprietor of McNally Jackson, was in town, and she told me that Milwaukee so reminded her of the town where she grew up and where her family ran the acclaimed McNally Robinson stores, which were awarded the Canadian bookseller of the year award more times than I can count. In the States, we tend to rotate--I don't think Publishers Weekly has ever awarded the honor to the same bookstore twice. The Winnipeg McNally Robinson store is still around, run by their long-time manager, and FOB John, who reps the Harvard, Yale, and MIT lists across much of Canada, says it's an absolutely must-see store for any retail-ophile like me. One day!
d. How the heck am I going to make this event work? Toews is no superstar in the United States, though she has a much higher prominence in Canada. She won the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize in Canada in 2008 for the above-mentioned The Flying Troutmans and lo and behold, she just won the same prize, for All My Puny Sorrows, the first person to ever do this since the prize was awarded in 1997. First time ever! Several of the former winners are among my favorite books, most notably Patrick DeWitt's The Sisters Brothers and Emma Donoghue's Room. And I also noticed that among the other finalists was a spring visitor to Boswell, Steven Galloway's The Confabulist. I tell you, the publishers think of Wisconsin as half in Canada, and I'm not going to argue with them about it. I just wish they still distributed Mr. Big bars here.
e. So I thought, I'm going to pair up Ms. Toews with another writer. My first thought was to ask our local Canadian writer in residence. She said Ms. Toews is indeed a great writer, but this request was a little odd, as Ms. Baldwin would be in Toronto that week. It's Giller Prize week, for goodness sake, and that's where all Canadian writers should be, celebrating Canadian writing in Canada and eating at Harvey's! Oh, Nanaimo Bar, what have I done?f. So I went back to Gabrielle at McSweeneys (Toews' American publisher, she has bounced around quite a bit like any Canadian publisher who is not named Alice Munro or Margaret Atwood) and she went to the Canadian publicist and said, "Daniel is worried about the timing. Could Miriam Toews be a nominee? What should we do?" The publicists agreed that of course it was possible that Miriam Toews could be a nominee for the prize but that I was jinxing the whole mess by even bringing it up. It turns out there is a direct flight from Toronto to Milwaukee so what am I worried about?
h. And of course my loyalties are slightly divided in another way too, as once again, we are hosting two of the finalists. The other is David Bezmozgis, author of The Betrayers. He's at Boswell on Monday, November 17, 7 pm, co-sponsored by the Stahl Center for Jewish Studies. It's very odd--the books are both as bright an orange as they can be, Little Bee orange, as I call it. They look nice together, a sea of mango smoothie. I have the temptation to pair them up with Kathleen Ernst's A Tradition of Deceit (coming Wednesday, November 19, not Canadian to my knowledge) and several other orange books, but we all know that color displays, while beautiful, don't really sell books. But they are so pretty.
i. Of course I thought of pairing these two Canadian writers together, though Bezmozgis's cultural identity is more Latvian than Canadian, and according to House Hunters, Riga is a real hot spot, properties are going fast, but I digress. And Miriam Toews has a cultural identity beyond Canadian as well. I often like to call her the word's foremost Mennonite literary novelist, mostly because I can't think of anyone else. And because I couldn't think of anyone else, I had nobody to pair her with on that front either. I will say that her previous books were not very hot on the Mennonite church leaders, so it might not be a good idea to pair her anyway, and what am I thinking, a bonnet romance? But the Milwaukee Mennonites actually appear more akin to modern Quakers from their mission statement, so a few of them might be interested in coming. But I don't think any of them are well-known authors.j. Now here's the thing. I actually had one other themed pairing that I was working on. There's an elephant in the room regarding All My Puny Sorrows, and that is that the book is really about suicide. Toews' father committed suicide a number of years ago, and her sister followed suit. So the novel has this as the setup, with Yoli (Yolandi, they are Mennonites!) being a bit of a mess, a fairly unsuccessful children's book writer, and Elf (Elfrieda) a successful pianist, as the publisher notes, "glamorous, wealthy, and happily married." But Elf struggles with terrible depression and has already tried to take her own life several times. And now she wants Yoli to take her to Switzerland to help her with assisted suicide. Yes, that's the setup. And here's the thing, this is a broodingly sad novel, and yet, it's shockingly funny.
l. And we thought about opening readers but it was a bit of a tall order to give Todd, who is helping with these things. "Todd, I need someone who is very sad, and very funny, but it isn't cloying and we're not talking violence (the budding writers love the violence) and not dystopian (they also love dystopia) and well, just someone perfect." Yes, too tall and order. My apologies to Todd who has to go through these conversations.
n. Here's my staff rec (the Canadian jacket is at left) I wrote after finishing the book, many months ago: "This heartbreaking tale chronicles the struggles of a woman whose father committed suicide, and the crushing depression that drives her older sister to follow in his footsteps. Miriam Toews is probably the world’s foremost Mennonite novelist, and while her background once again gives the story a unique perspective, the tale of Yolandi and Elfrieda is a struggle that transcends culture. All My Puny Sorrows is a contemplation of what binds people together, and what it means to be alive, beautifully told, spiced with laugh-out-loud humor, a gem of a novel." What a book!o. What can I say? Come to the reading already! If nothing else, congratulate Miriam Toews. Can you imagine if the winner of the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize and the Scotiabank Giller Prize went from a room of thousands to a bookstore with five people? And we are Winnipeg's American cousin, you know. The whole thing would be and will be an embarrassment.
p. If you'd like a to bring refreshments, here's a recipe for shoofly pie. I think the chicken borscht would be a little messy.
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