Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Swirling Blais novel like jazz
Rebecca, Born in the Maelstrom
By Marie-Claire Blais, translated by Nigel Spencer
Anansi, 201 pages, $22
CHECKING an online dictionary, you'll find maelstrom defined as "a very powerful whirlpool; a large, swirling body of water ... the Nordic word is borrowed from the Dutch maalstroom which means grinding stream."
It is a perfect description for this swirling stream-of-consciousness novel about artists, thieves and teenagers coping with contemporary society in the new millennium.
Winning the 2008 Governor General's Literary Award in its original French, it has recently been translated by Nigel Spencer, who has won two GGs himself for translating other Blais novels.
Blais is a legend in Quebec letters with 15 published works of fiction, almost all critically acclaimed.
This translation feels right, from beginning to end. This can't have been easy as there are thousands of commas and only a few periods and question marks in the whole text, but the rhythm essential in the French is present in the English version as well.
One way to approach the novel is to read it aloud, possibly to your partner at bedtime. Be warned, though. It's not suitable foreplay, as it can be grim, but it sounds fantastic and is loaded with sensual and visceral images.
It is jazz, but not smooth jazz. Sometimes it is bebop, sometimes Latin. There is pleasure in the rhythm and poetry of the language. If you can let go, the sense will come to you.
You could also approach the novel with a pen in hand and some notepaper to mark the scene changes and catalogue the characters and build the time line of the story.
So what actually happens in the book; is there a plot, a story? Yes, not one but many, all swirling around the family at the centre gathering for Christmas dinner on the Gulf of Mexico.
Many of the horrors of the 20th century, and some dating back to the 17th, are catalogued here, though always from a specific image to the general idea. These include slavery, racism, segregation, the Holocaust, poverty, injustice, Catholic priests molesting children, AIDS, euthanasia and global warming.
But far from being reportage or a polemic, this is a work of art, fulfilling Blais' definition in the novel of art as "contained aggression."
To an English reader, this novel keeps company with James Joyce's Ulysses and Virginia Woolf's The Waves or Mrs. Dalloway. Malcolm Lowry's Under the Volcano echoes in the Guatemalan bus trip, wonderfully rendered with a standout portrayal of a "fireman/mid-wife" trying to a reassure a 16-year-old mother about to give birth that he will assist her even if he has to give up three days of leave.
What distinguishes this novel from its antecedents is Blais' use of multiple consciousness and her unapologetic social and political analysis.
Blais portrays characters making moral choices, and making a difference, if sometimes just one person at a time. Despite her portrayal of existential anguish and the threat of a coming apocalypse in language of Biblical proportion, she offers glimpses of peace and joy in meditation and art. Ultimately, Blais suggests, the maelstrom can be survived with love and family.
Victor Enns is a Winnipeg writer whose first book review, of an early Blais novel, David Stern, was published in the U of M's Manitoban in 1973.
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition November 28, 2009 H8
-
WFP Hockey
Download our new hockey app for the iPhone for Winnipeg Jets updates
-
Editor's Bulletin
Sign up for daily bulletins from editor Margo Goodhand
-
Winnipeg Jets
All things NHL on our Jets landing page
-
Twitter
Follow our reporters and our news feeds on Twitter
-
News Cafe
Check out the menu, read our blog posts or get info on coming events
-
Facebook Fanpage
Follow our Facebook Fanpage for story links, contests and special events
Ads by Google
- Back to Top
- Return to Books
Poll
Most Popular
- Piers Morgan blasts 'gruesome' Madonna
- RCMP receptionist told Stobbe wife was dead
- Cabela's to open massive store just west of IKEA site
- Steinbach booms to No. 3 city in province
- RCMP receptionist told Stobbe wife dead
- Juror dismissed in second-degree murder trial of Mark Stobbe
- Should infants be allowed in the House of Commons?
- No comfort in trade talk: Veteran Thorburn says closely knit club well worth keeping together
- Search is on for man seen leaving the scene where two Alberta Mounties were shot
- US teen gets life in prison for killing 9-year-old; called the murder "pretty enjoyable"
- Piers Morgan blasts 'gruesome' Madonna
- Clothing chain pulls Caterpillar boots to protest closure of London, Ont., plant
- Three winning tickets sold for Friday's $50 million Lotto Max jackpot
- Woman's car stolen at gunpoint at St. Vital mall, police say
- Eleven people killed after truck hits van in southwestern Ontario
- 'This is so silly': Mom and Dad tell story of baby Zade, born on side of Highway 59
- Stobbe said slaying during shopping trip 'strange': sister-in-law
- Tactical squad storms St. Vital house
- Woman sexually assaulted during noon-hour in Exchange District
- Restaurant Dubrovnik may be closed for good
- Do you smoke marijuana?
- Driver dead after SUV goes over Disraeli Bridge
- George Clooney's prank could end Pitt's career
- Piers Morgan blasts 'gruesome' Madonna
- Tina Maze strips down to her sports bra to send out underwear message: 'Not your business'
- Clothing chain pulls Caterpillar boots to protest closure of London, Ont., plant
- Minor earthquake strikes near Manitoba
- Car's plunge off Disraeli fatal
- Two children, two women die in fire
- Kate Beckinsale's weight fears over Underworld catsuit
- Tassimo brewers and espresso packages recalled amid rupture, burn concerns
- Cabela's to open massive store just west of IKEA site
- Fighting fire with knowledge
- Spain mourns death of Catalan painter, sculptor Antoni Tapies, top contemporary art figure
- Pardon application fee to quadruple later this month despite complaints
- Steinbach booms to No. 3 city in province
- Our 'true champion'
- Harper driven by libertarian ideology, not reality
- OMG! Candy kings back at it
- Original Joe's, Elephant & Castle expanding
- Tassimo brewers and espresso packages recalled amid rupture, burn concerns
- Swedish bunny's sheep herding skills becomes click-monster on YouTube
- League encourages hazing secrecy
- Cabela's to open massive store just west of IKEA site
- Harper driven by libertarian ideology, not reality
- Northern fishing lodge destroyed by fire
- Police target drivers talking on cellphones, texting
- Obama torn by conflicting allies
- 'This is so silly': Mom and Dad tell story of baby Zade, born on side of Highway 59
- Fighting fire with knowledge
- Minor earthquake strikes near Manitoba
- Paddler Starkell was modern-day voyageur
- Tassimo brewers and espresso packages recalled amid rupture, burn concerns
- Driver dead after SUV goes over Disraeli Bridge
- Car's plunge off Disraeli fatal
- Canadian woman 'badly injured' in Mexico, local media report apparent beating
- Winnipeg mother watches as car stolen with child inside
- Swedish bunny's sheep herding skills becomes click-monster on YouTube
- League encourages hazing secrecy
- Cabela's to open massive store just west of IKEA site


You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010; View the changes. New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.