The Icelandic Canadian - 01.08.2002, Blaðsíða 43

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.08.2002, Blaðsíða 43
Vol. 57 #1 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 41 and her interest in them leads to her even- tual career as an historian. 1962 was the year that Saskatchewan’s NDP government brought in the first Medicare bill, paving the way for universal health care across Canada eight years later, but at the time prompting a bitter month- long doctor’s strike beginning on Dominion Day. Thora’s best friend, Gretchen, is the daughter of the town’s only doctor, the charismatic Scotsman, “Mac” McConnell. The McConnells, whose summer cottage is next door to the Sigurdsons, have befriend- ed Thora. Mrs. McConnell helps lead Thora to her career in archeological history by building a scale model replica of the Sigurdson homestead where Bjorn was born. But the doctor’s strike forces everyone in town to take sides, and tests Thora’s loy- alty to Gretchen and the McConnells. Thora remains publicly neutral. This neu- trality is mirrored by her perhaps deliber- ate inattention to the realities around her, an inattention which has fatal conse- quences. “Now I see that I always wanted to leave things blurry;” says the middle- aged Thora about her younger self. “I feared the certainty of sharp lines and unas- sailable facts.” Thora was not, she recalls elsewhere, “a particularly curious child, certainly not about the past.” But the tests and traumas of the summer shape her older self. “In my field, historical archeology,” she says, “my job is to look backwards and at the same time figure out what the future would have looked like from an earlier perspective.” Still, she admits, “I’ve trained myself not to get mired down in the present.” Thora’s present includes not only her Olafsson project, but also her ruptured relationship with Paul. Helgason, whose short story collection Fracture Patterns (1995) contains many strong women char- acters, creates in Thora a vivid and unfor- gettable narrator. Thora is a remarkable mixture of compassion and hard-headed- ness, which she turns on her examination of herself on the brink of young adulthood. But, the narration by her middle-aged self shows many unintended resonances of lessons not learned.. The novel is suffused with water imagery—stagnant, murky, cleansing and unforgiving, life-enhancing and deadly. (The novel’s opening line is “We are here because of the lake, my father used to say.”) This sustained motif is Helgason’s greatest accomplishment in the novel. In one particularly impressive passage Thora and her mother learn of Bjorn’s heart attack “out on the ice” at the curling rink, while the minister who has come to deliver the news makes unsatisfying tea from the wrong water as his boots leave “cookie-size pools of water” on the floor. The chapters set in 1962 are the heart of the novel, as Thora struggles with the realities of the “adult” world, and they contain some of the most moving and poet- ically described scenes, partly because Thora has learned to revel in detail and “excavate” her past. The sections set in 1998 are not always as strong, the charac- ters less deftly drawn. Still, Helgason pulls it all together in the end as images and fore- shadowing come together to allow Thora to solve not only the mystery of the leaking basement at the homestead, but the greater mystery of why Markus abandoned poet- ry- Swimming into Darkness is a luminous and haunting story told with confidence and skill. I look forward eagerly to Gail Helgason’s next book. LOCATED 1 1/4 Ml. SOUTH OF GIMLI ON #9 HIGHWAY C.E.S. Sveinson Ltd. DISTRIBUTOR OF MOST KINDS OF ■FRESHWATER FISH" •SMOKED FISH" bus. 642-8889 gimli. Manitoba res. 642-8277 ROC 1B0

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