Two by Two
28 Feb
I’ve just finished Not Wanted on the Voyage by Timothy Findlay, which was a Christmas gift from Jen. I always thought it a bit odd that in the US we never really did much with Canadian lit, so I was extremely curious to see what this man, who is a towering icon, had done.
Long story short, it was great. Now, to make it long again!
I didn’t expect anything in particular—I knew it was about Noah’s Ark (one of the many stories from the Bible that are just ripe for picking, aren’t they?) and that was it. I didn’t expect the fantastic spin, the crazy genre-as-metaphor issues, or the violent attachment I would form to some characters. Not to mention literally stomach-sinking aversion to others. I think this last point was my absolute favorite though. When certain characters came into the PoV spotlight, I literally felt ill. Findlay is quick to show the humanity in everyone—even Crazy!Noah gets his moments of beauty and affection—but they’re all such catalysts for violent reader-reaction by the first few chapters.
And that’s hard when you’re building a world like this. It bears so much similarity to our world, but at the same time none at all. The plants and (most of) the animals are the same, but their existence isn’t what you expect—the birds talk, the sheep sing. At first it seems like a turn of phrase, an expression, “The sheep sang…” but slowly you realize that it’s no joke. The birds are talking. The sheep are singing.
Not to mention that God stops by for tea. And Noah’s son is blue because of a run-in with some baddies. And Lucifer is a tranny geisha who talks like Krishna. (Not sure if the Krishna thing was intentional, but whoa Bhagavad Gita references!)
This world is pulled off effortlessly, and in seamless integration with the reality of its inhabitants. It’s so eye-opening for an aspiring writer to read something by a true master of world-building—specifically an aspiring writer who tends toward fantasy. The things I learned were subtle and small, but things I wonder now that I didn’t know before. I’ll never be one to have a real meaning behind my stories. I’m not a politician or, god forbid, a preacher. I have absolutely nothing of consequence to society to say (that hasn’t been said a million times already.) But that doesn’t mean I can’t learn from someone who did, right?
My only complaint was that the metaphors were overtaxed, and I felt like someone had smacked me upside the head with a bloody unicorn horn by the time the thing was over. That does tend to ruin the subtle appreciation of the art. There were scenes that felt repetitive in that way, but they were few and far between, and frankly, well-earned. It’s rare that something so heavy is such an easy read—and I think the combination of effortless, realist style combined with a vein of humor that runs even through the harshest times is to thank for that.
That was a great Christmas present. Gee, February and I’m still reading my holiday books. I’m sure making this last.
In a similar vein, how is it that some authors are so capable of making animals into real, believable, lovable (or hateful) characters? Animal Farm is literally one of my favorite books ever, Watership Down still stands out in my mind as an early love, and I really feel like Findlay’s Mottyl the Cat in this book is a triumph. She’s less humanized, more animal, but still the most sympathetic character in the book. I’m not talking about Redwall-like animals, who are just people with fur and tails. I mean animal-animals, dammit.
That’s brilliant, but I can’t even imagine how one would accomplish it.
-Katey
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Now playing: Louis XIV – Guilt By Association
via FoxyTunes








My mother was talking a few months back about a book she read where it was Noah’s Ark – but through the eyes of the other family members. Is that the same book? If not, let me know, and I’ll get the title/author for you.
Also, read Lamb. Utterly irreverent, but Sari thought the origin of the fishes and loaves thing was rather inspired.
On the subject of animal-people: The Fur Person. It’s all through the eyes of a cat. While I like cats, I’m not generally much on cat-POV books… but this one was GOOD. So good that when I saw it at a garage sale, I insisted my friend Xyara buy it instead of snagging it for myself.
(Sorry I’m pathetically absent author names – but all these books are Mom’s and I can’t just go look at my shelf.)
That has to be the same book… though I suppose there could be others, that’s pretty much what it’s all about. I’ll look around for The Fur Person, because that kind of shit AMAZES me. I really love cats too, but… how the hell do they do that?