Jonathan Ball's Blog, page 42

May 13, 2018

Cancer

Your essay “Why We

Must Overthrow Churchill” could

Not be more timely

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Published on May 13, 2018 09:56

Leo

The windiest wind

That ever winded will soon

Wind into your wind

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Published on May 13, 2018 09:56

Virgo

You should look up the

Word ‘defenestrate’ because

It will soon occur

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Published on May 13, 2018 09:56

Libra

The sad plight of the

Onion will always move you

To shed many tears

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Published on May 13, 2018 09:56

Scorpio

Demand more from your

Employees, beginning with

Their actual names

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Published on May 13, 2018 09:56

Sagittarius

You’ll learn lots about

Life after a pigeon takes

You under its wing

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Published on May 13, 2018 09:56

Capricorn

The wisest man knows

That all of his wisdom means

Nothing next to breasts

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Aquarius

Go against advice

You receive from talking dogs

And magical cats

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May 9, 2018

Son of a Trickster (Eden Robinson)

The first book of a trilogy, Eden Robinson's Son of a Trickster focuses on the tumultuous everyday life of Jared, a sixteen-year-old struggling to survive his family.


His parents are separated and strung out, and his mom is downright dangerous (an odd mix of neglectful and overly protective). He keeps himself drunk or stoned just to maintain some level of calm. His life is so crazy that when a raven starts talking to him, Jared barely has the mental space to worry about it.


Robinson skillfully blends wacky, over-the-top characters that would be at home in an edgy sitcom with a supernatural horror plot that draws on indigenous beliefs. By the time Robinson throws cannibalistic river otters at you, nothing prevents them from being both utterly terrifying and extremely funny at the same time.


Robinson punctuates the action with tiny chapters that, in a more conventional fantasy novel, would offer background on the story's mythology. Here is Robinson's version of those normally weighty passages:


252 million years ago on Earth in late May on a Monday, the trilobites were going out for Starbucks before work, la la la, near swampy Pangea, the single continent that stretched from pole to pole. The trilobites tended to avoid the weird, hippie mammals and reptiles that had decided to give land-dwelling a go and had descended into eating each other […] No accounting for taste, they told themselves. […] The trilobites were blindsided by the end of their world. They were like, whoa, man. What the hell? […] Mass extinction sucks.


Son of a Trickster works as an urban fantasy but also reads like a parody of the genre. She goes beyond the genre's limitations as a result. Often, the characterizations in urban fantasy are generic because authors focus on details of the supernatural story world, few of which are directly relevant to the plot.


Robinson reverses this normal trajectory. Midway through the novel, you wonder when something supernatural is going to happen. Aside from a raven speaking to Jared, and saying almost nothing of any importance (he warns Jared not to wear so much Axe body spray, says it doesn't work like in the commercials), basically nothing supernatural has occurred. Instead, we've become embroiled in the turmoil of Jared's normal life.


Robinson ramps up the supernatural developments in the latter half of the novel, but this long, slow build displays both her confidence and skill, as does the way she resists long, drawn-out explanations of how her supernatural world works. (Those trilobites, by the way, have nothing to do with anything whatsoever. They are Robinson's light, breezy way to introduce the broad theme of looming mass extinction due to environmental catastrophe.)


The most impressive thing about Son of a Trickster is how Robinson can, when she wants to, cut through all of her jokes, through the story's absurd tone, and move past grandiose implications of how the supernatural intersects with Jared's life. In these instances, she manages small, affecting insights and sad moments.


Yes, Jared finds himself at the centre of supernatural conflicts, but he's also torn between compassion for his dad and loyalty to his mom. “He wanted to believe his mom was sorry, but his dad was always sorry and he still kept doing crap he had to say sorry for. He didn't want to be a sucker, but he didn't want to be alone. Everything ached and all the choices felt wrong.”


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Published on May 09, 2018 07:24

May 6, 2018

Taurus

Your snoring will get

Out of hand and awaken

The newly deceased

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Published on May 06, 2018 09:56