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  • Monthly Archives: February 2020

    • WHAT THE OCEANS REMEMBER: Thinking and Writing with Music

      Posted at 10:00 pm by TheAuthorsBookClub
      Feb 25th

      Guest post by Sonja Boon

      I first picked up the flute when I was 11 (almost 12, I would have said back then). It was Grade 7 and I was one of about ten new flute players that year, all of us sitting in a row and struggling to conjure music from shiny new instruments. I’ll confess that it took me a week to coax anything even resembling a sound out of my flute; it took much longer – and many dizzy spells – to make my way into the second and third octaves. Somehow, thirty-nine years later (yes, that makes me 50 if you’re counting), I’m still playing. Over the years, my flute and my self have become one.

      It might seem odd to begin a blog post about writing a book by reflecting on music making. But here’s the thing: playing the flute taught me to think. It taught me to feel. It taught me to dream. And it also taught me to write.

      I’m no longer a full-time flutist, but I still feel the flute under my fingers, and flute thinking – that is, thinking with sound, air, phrases, and music – continues to influence all of my creative and intellectual work. The music is always there, under the surface. It’s in the way I listen to words on the page, and in how I interrogate the rhythm of the text. It’s in structure. It’s in weight. It’s in the way the text breathes, pauses, stops, lifts, and soars.

      But in my memoir, What the Oceans Remember: Searching for Belonging and Home, it’s in my heritage, too.

      Music is what first connected me to my ancestors: my musical passions seemed to align with those of my choral director grandfather, a man I barely got a chance to know, but who studied at the same music conservatory as I did, half a century before me. And so, music gave me a way to build a relationship with him across time and space. Music is also one of the things that connects me to my children – my two sons, both of whom have found joy in musical performance (if not in practicing….). 

      But music reaches much further through my family histories.

      Music is the rhythm of the oceans that my ancestors travelled, by choice or by force. It’s the calming rush of waves crashing and retreating along the shore. Music is the sound of voices, the mingling of heritages, languages, traditions. It’s the jangle of bracelets on a wrist, the pull and push of a steam engine, a ship’s horn, the whoosh of a whale spout, birds in flight. Music is the buzzing of insects deep in a rainforest.

      But music is also the sound of silence: it’s the words I’ve never shared with my ancestors, the archival materials that disappeared or never existed at all, the conversations I’ll never be able to recover. In these moments, music resides in suspension, in spaces that only speculation can fill. 

      For a while, the manuscript that became What the Oceans Remember: Searching for Belonging and Home was called “Water Music.” It was an homage to the musical threads that weave through my story, both the overt ones that link me to the generations that came before me, but also the emotional and creative impulses of music making that continue to shape everything about my thinking, writing, and dreaming. 

      What the Oceans Remember is about family, memory, and identity. It’s about politics and history, and about finding ways to live in the present with and through the complexities, challenges, beauty – and also, indeed, horror – of the past. For that kid who picked up a brand-new silver flute way back in 1981, never suspecting where that flute might take her, it’s also – inevitably – about music.


      Sonja Boon is a researcher, writer, teacher, and flutist living in St. John’s. Passionate about stories and storytelling, she is the author of What the Oceans Remember: Searching for Belonging and Home (WLU Press, 2019), a memoir that traverses five continents and spans more than two centuries.

      Sonja’s creative non-fiction essays appear in published collections as well as in Geist, The Ethnic Aisle, and ROOM, among others. In addition to her literary work, Sonja has published three scholarly books and numerous articles and book chapters on a range of topics, from eighteenth-century medical life writing to breastfeeding selfies, and craftivism. For six years, Sonja was principal flutist and a frequent soloist with the Portland Baroque Orchestra (Oregon).

      Visit Sonja’s website. Follow her on Twitter.

      Posted in Guest Authors, Recommended Books | Tagged canadian authors, canadian book clubs, memoir, Sonja Boon, The Authors' Book Club, What the oceans remember
    • Writing THE DEVOTED: the Research and Discipline of Stepping into My Novel

      Posted at 9:45 am by TheAuthorsBookClub
      Feb 18th

      Guest post by Blair Hurley

      I wrote my first novel, The Devoted, while still living in my hometown of Boston, fresh out of a grad writing program and keen to tell a story that I felt passionate about. It took four or five years of struggling with scenes and characters and memories from my own childhood, but it didn’t really come together as a story until I realized that I had to step into risky, unknown territory, both from my own realm of experience and also beyond it.

      The Devoted is inspired by both my Irish Catholic roots and my lifelong interest and research into Buddhism in America, particularly the experience of women exploring Buddhist practice. The novel is about a Boston Irish Catholic woman who, disillusioned by the sexual abuse scandals of the church that broke in the early 2000s, converts to Zen Buddhism. After heartbreak and betrayal, she becomes trapped in a manipulative sexual relationship with her Zen Master. The book raises the question of how the #metoo movement can play out in spiritual spaces, where powerful, respected teachers have abused their authority with vulnerable students seeking a spiritual experience. It also explores the healing and redemptive power that faith, both Catholic and Zen, can bring to our lives.

      To write the novel, I had to immerse myself in research about both Catholicism and Zen, reading religious texts, but also Zen poetry, koans, and folktales from Buddhist cultures. I read the fascinating memoirs of medieval Buddhist nuns and was surprised to discover their honest, forthright discussions of the discrimination they encountered. In one Tibetan nun’s account, she sings mournfully of how her Master refuses to believe she can achieve the same level of spiritual accomplishment as the monks that surround her; she defiantly declares she will prove him wrong.

      Many of my readers assume that I’m more familiar with the Catholic portions of the story, but even though my family has Irish Catholic history, I was raised without any particular religious affiliation, free to explore and visit religious spaces without any sort of official allegiance. To write my character’s strict Catholic upbringing, I had to dive deep into Catholic stories, songs, and doctrine, questioning my family about their own memories and jokes and superstitions. When writing scenes set both in Catholic churches and Buddhist Zendos, I felt as much of an outsider as my character, stepping tentatively inside the temple for the first time. What if I got some crucial points of doctrine or ritual wrong? What if I inadvertently disrespected someone else’s sacred space? For the early drafts of my writing, I hovered nervously on the edges of writing these scenes, afraid to offend or to misrepresent, afraid that I didn’t have what it took to write the scene authentically. Writers often struggle with this question of authenticity — do I dare tell this story? Is it my story to tell? Can I do this story justice?

      For me, the line came when I realized I had written cautiously around the edges of the real issues I wanted to address. To really show my character’s experience on the page — with her family, with her Zen Master, singing in church and running away from it, fighting with her brother and falling in love and betraying people all on her messy quest for personal grace — I had to walk into those rooms with her. I had to do my homework, get the research right, walk into those spaces myself whenever I could, and in my imagination when I couldn’t. I visited Zen and Tibetan temples, and wandered in and out of Catholic churches; I read and listened; and at some point, when I had done the work, I had to sit down at my desk, take a deep breath, and begin.


      Blair Hurley is the author of The Devoted published by W.W. Norton and Penguin Random House Canada. The novel was longlisted for The Center for Fiction’s First Novel Prize. Her work is published or forthcoming in Electric Literature, The Georgia Review, Ninth Letter, Guernica, Paris Review Daily, West Branch, and elsewhere. She received a 2018 Pushcart Prize and scholarships from Bread Loaf, Hawthornden Castle, and the Ontario Arts Council.

      Visit Blair’s website. Follow her on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.

      Posted in Guest Authors, Recommended Books | Tagged Blair Hurley, book clubs, fiction, The Authors' Book Club, The Devoted
    • Book clubs, choose a book …

      Posted at 3:47 pm by TheAuthorsBookClub
      Feb 6th

      Use the Search Button (top right) to look up a book title, an author, location (e.g., Vancouver), or key words (e.g., thriller) or visit our Invite An Author page.

      Visit our Invite An Author page to learn more about our amazing authors!

      Posted in Recommended Books | Tagged ann y.k. choi, book clubs, canadian authors, Canadian publishing, canadian writers, CanLit, david albertyn, fiction, Fiona Ross, Indigenous authors, memoirs, Recommended Books, short stories, The Authors' Book Club
    • Authors Across Canada

      Posted at 1:51 pm by TheAuthorsBookClub
      Feb 1st

      Click on the authors’ names to learn more about them.

      1 Vanessa
      Farnsworth
      (Creston)
      2 Daniel
      Kalla

      (Vancouver)
      3 Liz
      Levine
      * (Vancouver)
      4 Lauren
      Carter
      (Winnipeg)
      5 Jenny
      Heijun Wills
      (Winnipeg)
      6 David
      Albertyn
      (Toronto)
      7 Samantha
      M. Bailey
      (Toronto)
      8 Becky
      Blake
      (Toronto)
      9 Dennis
      Bock

      (Toronto)
      10 Danila Botha (Toronto)
      11 Chris
      M. Briggs
      (Toronto)
      12 Hannah
      Brown
      (Toronto)
      13 Ann Y.K. Choi
      (Toronto)
      14 Sharon A. Crawford (Toronto)15 Farzana Doctor (Toronto)
      16 Karen
      Grose
      (Toronto)
      17 Nate Hendley
      (Toronto)
      18 K.J.
      Howe

      (Toronto)
      19 Blair
      Hurley

      (Oakville)
      20 Uzma
      Jalaluddin

      (Markham)
      21 Kasia
      Jaronczyk

      (Guelph)
      22 Tehmina
      Khan

      (Toronto)
      23 Derek
      Mascarenhas

      (Toronto)
      24 Hannah
      M. McKinnon

      (Oakville)
      25 Maria
      C. McLean

      (Toronto)
      26 Maria
      Meindl

      (Toronto
      27 Kim
      Moritsugu

      (Toronto)
      28 Lisa de
      Nikolits

      (Toronto)
      29 C.S.
      O’Cinneide

      (Guelph)
      30 Dorothy
      Ellen Palmer

      (Burlington)
      31 Laurie
      Petrou

      (Grimsby)
      32 Waub-geshig
      Rice
      **
      33 Marissa Stapley
      (Toronto)
      34 Jesse
      Thistle

      (Toronto)
      35 Kelly S.
      Thompson

      (North Bay)
      36 Ann
      Walmsley

      (Toronto)
      37 Vanessa
      Westermann

      (Havelock)
      38 Catherine McKenzie
      (Montreal)
      39 Genevieve Graham
      (Halifax)
      40 Sonja Boon
      (St. John’s)
      *Liz splits her time between Vancouver and Toronto **Waub splits his time between Sudbury and Wasauksing

      Posted in General | Tagged book clubs, canadian authors, Canadian books, CanLit, Indigenous authors, The Authors' Book Club
    • We welcomed 40 authors!

      Posted at 12:55 pm by TheAuthorsBookClub
      Feb 1st

      When our website launched on January 1, 2020, we set 15 authors as a goal (including the two of us!) for the month. We ended with 40! Forty amazing authors from across Canada.

      As Canadian authors and readers ourselves, we wanted to support Canadian book publishers and authors who worked and lived in Canada. We wanted to create a community that was welcoming and inclusive with authors from big and small publishing houses, and authors at different stages of their professional writing careers.

      We thank all the authors who have joined The Authors’ Book Club. We could not have done this without you! A special thanks to Uzma Jalauddin, Laurie Petrou, Marissa Stapley, Blair Hurley, and Farzana Doctor who were among the first authors to support this initiative. Thank you for leading the way! We also want to thank Deborah Dundas from the Toronto Star and Sue Carter from Quill & Quire for helping to generate awareness of what we are doing.

      As we continue to welcome authors, we will now focus on increasing our visibility amongst private book clubs. We remain committed to creating a vibrant online community for author and reader engagement.

      Posted in General | Tagged ann y.k. choi, authors, Blair Hurley, book clubs, canadian authors, Canadian books, Canadian publishing, david albertyn, Farzana Doctor, Fiona Ross, Laurie Petrou, literature, Marissa Stapley, The Authors' Book Club, Uzma Jalaluddin
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