All tagged Annie Proulx

The Shipping News

I realized I had never read her Pulitzer winner, The Shipping News (1993). So this year I did. I found myself slowly pulled in by an unlikely hero, Quoyle, a gentle giant in a cruel world full of betrayal, disappointment, and heartbreak. The precocious characters multiply as Proulx’s award-winning novel progresses and her hero returns to his family’s ancestral home in Newfoundland. He finds himself in an unlikely Eden, but in time it becomes clear it is the home he has always sought. Ultimately, The Shipping News is a testament to the power of place in great writing as well as the magic of human connection to heal us; Proulx transports her readers to the bitter cold and hard living of Newfoundland where small acts of kindness and community serve as palliatives to the landscape’s harshness.

Barkskins

When I picked up Barkskins (2016) by Annie Proulx, I expected a book about trees. And trees there most certainly are growing among its pages, although not in the Richard Powers’ The Overstory sort of way; trees are not characters and the tree-inspired figurative constructs with which Proulx crafts her novel differ greatly from Powers’. What I found was something more than trees but certainly relating to them both as a subject and a metaphor. Proulx’s multi-generational story spans the course three and half centuries. In that sense, it is tree-like; many arboreal species live much longer than that. Spread over so much time, this hefty novel (it exceeds 700 pages) comes to life with a large cast of characters, so large that the family trees at the book’s end are useful, even necessary. At the heart of all their stories is a familial link to trees.