The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1981, Qupperneq 44

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1981, Qupperneq 44
42 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN AUTUMN, 1981 town Baltimore. Wikenhauser plans to re- tain four male puffins and four females in his exhibit. Although the delightful little puffins command major attention at Glen Oak, an- other Icelander is resident in the zoo, too. Tinna of Rosegill, a 10 year-old Icelandic horse, a small but powerful breed, has lived here for several years. During spring and summer Tinna gives rides to the young folk that crowd through the zoo, set in a beautiful, wooded residential area of this central Illi- nois city. But ask Wikenhauser and his assistants, where their hearts really lie and they’ll tell you, with the puffins. For Wikenhauser, that’s not hard to see why. After all, he’s practically the only parent the little Ice- landers have ever known. —Courtesy of Icelandair. BOOK REVIEW: Crystalline Lives On A Canadian Island SOME SILENT SHORE A novel by Sigrid Johannesson, 178 pages, Sunrise, $10.95 During the last quarter of the 19th cen- tury, many Icelanders immigrated to Canada, settling around the small town of Gimli on Lake Winnipeg’s southwestern shore: most Americans of Icelandic descent have ties with this area. Sigrid Johannesson (Mrs. Herschel E. Woltzen), who moved with her husband and family from Peoria to St. Louis 11 years ago, is of this Icelandic descent; and her mother, now in her 90s, still lives in Gimli where young Sigrid grew up. Understandably, then, Johannesson’s remarkable first novel, “Some Silent Shore,” was initially issued in Gimli amid a flurry of excitement, and several copies are on their way to Iceland. “Some Silent Shore” gets its title from Sir Samuel Garth’s 1699 poem. The Dis- pensary: “To die is landing on some silent shore/Where billows never break, nor tempests roar.” It takes place during the Depression between May 1933 and June 1934, focusing on the cruel winter hardships endured by the few inhabitants of Matheson Island, three miles offshore from Gimli. For a month each fall as the lake freezes over and each spring during the tumultuous thaw, the islanders are completely isolated. These are times of death and re-birth, and Johan- nesson superbly captures the stark loneli- ness and the binding sense of community through individual lives and the crises which test them. Johannesson insists that although the setting is authentic the novel is not auto- biographical nor are the characters real. They are, she says, amalgamations of people she has known; and, indeed, they have the effect of being remembered and reshaped through the mature woman’s com- passionate understanding. The central figures are the Paulson family — Jon, Stephanie, and their daughters, Christy (12), Johanna (10), Lara (6), Margrit (3) — who corres- pond basically to Johannesson’s own family unit. (Christy, surely a reflection of the young Sigrid, is the object of some tender fun-poking.) The beginning finds the family in Winnipeg. The stock-market crash has wiped out Jon’s savings and threatens “The Paulson Fisheries Limited,” which he has built up from one boat. Jon is a strong, silent, proud man; but it is Stephanie, the mother, whose beauty, courage and quiet understanding sustain them as they sell their comfortable home and settle in a one-room

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The Icelandic Canadian

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