AELAQ     Current Issue     Archives     How to get mRb  
Tenth Issue
Volume 5, No. 2
 
features

In The Poetry Pavilion
By Carmine Starnino

Where The Heart Is
By Ian McGillis


fiction

Living Room
Reviewed by Joel Yanofsky

Behind The Face Of Winter
Reviewed by Doug Rollins

House Of Sighs
Reviewed by X. I. Selene

One Beautiful Day To Come
Reviewed by X. I. Selene

All Pure Souls
Reviewed by William Brown

Mile End
Reviewed by Noel Rieder

Love In The Age Of Confusion
Reviewed by Padma Viswanathan

The War Criminal
Reviewed by Mark Heffernan


fiction at a glance

Larry Volt
Reviewed by Ian McGillis


non-fiction

Reading Nelligan
Reviewed by Eric Ormsby

The Molsons: Their Lives & Times 1780 - 2000
Reviewed by Mary Soderstrom

Ribsauce: A Cd/anthology Of Words By Women
Reviewed by Maria Simpson

Life Everyone Else...but Different: The Paradoxical Success Of Canadian Jews
Reviewed by Louise Abbott

Resist!
Reviewed by Jane McAslan

Counter Productive: Quebec City Convergence For The Summit Of The Americas
Reviewed by Jane McAslan


non-fiction at a glance

A Christian In Israel: A Journey In The Holy Land And The Concerns Of Today
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Alone In The Appalachians: A City Girl's Trek From Maine To The Gaspésie
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Climb Your Stairway To Heaven
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Love Strong As Death: Lucy Peel's Canadian Journal 1833-1836
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

On The Go: What You Need To Know
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik


poetry

Clinical Studies
Reviewed by Andrew Steinmetz

Girls And Handsome Dogs
Reviewed by Andrew Steinmetz

The Lover's Progress
Reviewed by Edward Smith

Pavilion
Reviewed by Carmine Starnino

A Picnic On Ice: Selected Poems
Reviewed by Adrienne Ho


young readers

Honey Trouble
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

Where Does A Tiger-heron Spend The Night?
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

Strange School, Secret Wish
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

Stella, Fairy Of The Forest
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

Smarty Pants
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

When Pigs Fly
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

Isaac's Dream Catcher
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

Lobster Kid's Guide To Exploring San Diego
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

A. M. Klein: Poet And Prophet
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

Emma Albani: International Star
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

Marshall Mccluhan, Wise Guy
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

George Grant: Redefining Canada
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

The Mirror And The Beast
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

Popular Mechanics For Kids: Make Cool Gadgets For Your Room
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

Popular Mechanics For Kids: Make Amazing Toy And Game Gadgets
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

Illegally Easy Halloween Costumes For Kids
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

Hey Kids...lets Make Gifts!
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

The Prince Chameleon Workbooks
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine

Ghost Cat
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine



Ribsauce: A Cd/anthology Of Words By Women
Taien Ng-chan
$18.95
Paper 208 pp.
Vehicule Pres 1-55065-150-1
non-fiction

Fresh-voiced and female

Printer friendly         Send to a friend

After a lull in actual spoken work performances, Montrealers have recently seen a spate of books devoted to the local spoken (and written) word scene. Running with Scissors (Cumulus Press), You & Your Bright Ideas and Impure: Reinventing the Word in Montreal (both Véhicule Press) have all sought to carve out a niche. Now, Véhicule introduces this slick-looking volume dedicated to female authors and performers.

One of the problems in capturing the diversity of literature today is that much of the work being created is written for performance, and is appreciated in its best light in theatres, bars, and coffeehouses. In an effort to convey this, Ribsauce includes a CD tucked into the back jacket featuring artists such as Catherine Kidd, Debbie Young, Alexis O'Hara, and Skidmore. The CD is edited by Kaarla Sundström and Alex Boutros, while the book proper is edited by Taien Ng-Chan, so each part is discrete.

Ribsauce (a play on the rib taken from Adam to create Eve) is an ambitious project, and not just because it combines writing and speech. In Ng-Chan's introduction (called "an interview with myself") she offers some suggestion of what glues this anthology together, asserting that women need "new strategies beyond simple identity politics" and that it is time to "push the boundaries." Statements such as these, while purportedly trying to broaden the scope of the book beyond feminist politics, actually try to create a new feminist agenda. Perhaps it would have been better to let each woman's work stand on its own. The temptation in anthologies is to tie them up with a neat bow, and the women represented in Ribsauce have no common agenda.

Happily, some of the authors' agendas are to deliver amusing, finely crafted writing. Heather O'Neill's "The Diary of a Fourteen Year Old Butterfly" collects the fresh-voiced musings of an adolescent girl about her blue-collar life. She says of her apartment: "The bedroom is so small, every way I stretch my arms, I hit a sister." Joni Murphy rages against nine-to-five culture in a poem called "Head Office" where an employee is called on the carpet for being too dressed up on casual Friday: "Look around, all your co-workers are nice and comfortable…why can't you just be casual?" She also bids us "batten down the cubicles" against an apocalyptic office storm in "A climate controlled cataclysm." Prize-winning Nova Scotian poet Calabrese offers "Her Father's Barn," a play about a cheating farm wife and her "snub-nosed, blunt-fingered country-bumpkin" husband that is at turns brash and touching.

The CD offers another dimension of authorship, and shows other ways genre and form can be expanded. There are many different sounds to take in: voices are laid over beats, electronically modified, combined with instruments, presented solo in front of a crowd, or within an ensemble. While a nice addition to the package, the CD would have worked better had it been accompanied by some sort of lyric/word sheet. This is not exactly a CD to unwind to at the end of a hectic day; it requires some attention and focus, and a text to follow along with would certainly help.

Maria Simpson is a Montreal writer and production manager for a children's press.



Site Meter