AELAQ     Current Issue     Archives     How to get mRb  
Twelfth issue
Volume 6, No. 2
 



features

The Fine (and Dying) Art Of Travel
By Ian McGillis

The Loser's Advocate
By Joel Yanokfsky

The Poetry Of Second Thoughts
By Carmine Starnino


fiction

A Fine Passage
Reviewed by X.. I. Selene

Blues From The Malabar Coast
Reviewed by Jill Rollins

Hovering World
Reviewed by Poppy Wilkinson

My Own Devices
Reviewed by Noel Rieder

Taproot Ii: Prose And Images From The Eastern Townships
Reviewed by Lucille King-Edwards

Ten Thousand Lovers
Reviewed by Edward Smith

Helen With A Secret And Other Stories
Reviewed by X. I. Selene

Wound Ballistics
Reviewed by Kim Bourgeois

Jerusalem: Snapshots From A Distance
Reviewed by Zena Faith Levine



non-fiction

Etty: The Letters And Diaries Of Etty Hillesum, 1941-1943
Reviewed by Mark Heffernan

Cyclops: Contemporary Canadian Narrative Art
Reviewed by Phil Hawes

From The Japanese: A Journalist's Encounters
Reviewed by Linda Ghan

Sheila's Take
Reviewed by Mary Soderstrom

Shall We Dance?: A Patriotic Politics For Canada
Reviewed by Kenneth Alan Milkman, Ph.D

Russia Between Yesterday And Tomorrow
Reviewed by Louise Abbott

The Anarchist & The Devil Do Cabaret
Reviewed by Matt Huculak


non-fiction at a glance

A Short History Of Quebec (third Edition)
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Cheap Thrills Montreal
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Smart Shopping Montreal
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Beyond The Mountain: True Tales About Montreal
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

That's The Way The Cookie Crumbles
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik



poetry

Throw The Captain Overboard!
Reviewed by Adrienne Ho

Antimatter
Reviewed by Adrienne Ho

The Way Life Should Be
Reviewed by Bert Almon

How We Play At It: A List
Reviewed by Bert Almon

Calling Home
Reviewed by Bert Almon

One Building In The Earth
Reviewed by Bert Almon



young readers

Breaking Free: The Story Of William Kurelek
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

The Best Book Of Bikes
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Funky Junk: Cool Stuff To Make With Hardware
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Make Things Happen: The Key To Networking For Teens
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

What's The Matter With Albert? A Story Of Albert Einstein
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Where's Pup?
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

But If They Do
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Sam Finds A Monster
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Pizza For Sam
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Sinbad's Secret
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Max The Mighty Superhero
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Max The Movie Director
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

The Rainmaker
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

How Hot Was It?
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte




Ten Thousand Lovers
By Edeet Ravel
$24.95
paper 373 pp.
McArthur & Company 0-7553-03709
fiction

Lilycentrism

Printer friendly         Send to a friend

New Document Lily, a young Canadian studying linguistics in Jerusalem, falls in love and conceives a child with Ami, who interrogates Palestinians and is extremely good at it. This troubles Lily until she's satisfied that Ami is unique among his colleagues in always persuading, never forcing. How he manages this is gradually revealed, along with his disaffection from, and eventual traumatic break with, his employers.

Ten Thousand Lovers, Edeet Ravel's first novel, is a hybrid of the romance and the book-with-a-purpose. As far as the purpose goes, it may be enough that the author condemns an injustice; though you'd think her sympathy for Palestinians would translate into more substantial things for her only Arab character to say. The romance does less well thanks to a serious rookie mistake - the relentless first-person perspective. Lily dryly narrates weekend drives and conversations with Ami and wanderings of her own, but sees nothing of his workplace because logically she can't be there. The result is a story of interrogation practices uncluttered by interrogation scenes. Instead, everything we learn of the business is expounded over many pages, with Lily asking the right questions and Ami editorializing.

In this he is distinctly obliging, but given the Lily-centric point of view, is also so dependent that when his heroic end arrives (offstage: the details briefly told Lily, her reaction given at length) it seems only natural that he's seeded her and died, a job well done. It's worth noting that Lily's body is extremely well described thanks to Ami, who is not returned the favour. Of him we learn that he has a beautiful smile and is eight inches taller than her. Beyond this we are repeatedly told he is charming. The pregnant Lily is identified with the Virgin Mary by herself and two obliging friends. You'd like to think she's joking, but it's only an extreme example of Ravel's unblushing way with biblical parallels.

We learn much about Lily - the clothes she wears, the gifts she receives - but we aren't always sure why. She's angry or upset, and the emotions surprise us because the situation hasn't properly set them up. Adjectives like "wonderful" and "mesmerizing" stand in for the wonderful or mesmering thing that is not described. We are told everyone laughed, but not what the joke was. The play Ami writes in defiance of the system remains largely a mystery, but we are told it's "superb," was banned, and won seven prizes. The author appears to be drawing on a personal kitty of responses. For herself it's enough to record the signifiers to which the emotion is pre-attached; for us it's as if she's listening to music inside her head, and all we hear is her fingers drumming.

Ravel seems most comfortable within the two commentaries that periodically break up the narrative: on the Bible as ethics, and on Hebrew ambiguities. She appears to have a mission to rescue the book and the language from their makers. A worthy cause, no doubt, but this is all barely novelized thought, floating somewhere above the action. Whole chunks of the story seem connected only to something outside itself: Lily's parents who don't appear but are often recalled as not caring enough about her, minor characters who flit on and off the stage without consequence.

Ami's highly effective interrogatory methods come down to being a good listener, sharing meals with the prisoners, generally drawing them out of themselves. Maybe they'll share a joint, too. It seems meant as some kind of prescription, but you feel the Arab-Israeli problem is more complex than that. Perhaps the author would have fared better with a less personally involving subject.

Edward Smith is an Ottawa editor.



Site Meter