Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Crow Lake by Mary Lawson



Kate has escaped rural Ontario to lead the life of a distinguished zoologist, but she's drawn back to the siblings left at Crow Lake. Publishers in nine countries have bought the rights to this Canadian work, and that many publishers can't be wrong.
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

About the Author

Mary Lawson was born and brought up in a farming community in southwestern Ontario. A distant relative of L. M. Montgomery (author of Anne of Green Gables), she moved to England in 1968, and now lives with her husband in Surrey. She returns to Canada every year. Asked on CBC's This Morning what she misses most about Canada, she says without hesitation that it's the rocks of the Canadian Shield. England has rocks, she says, but they are not smooth and rounded and "whale-like."

Lawson is a firm believer in the strength of the influences we receive as children, a theme explored in the book. Lawson's father was a research chemist for an oil company in Sarnia, Ontario, and the family lived in Blackwell, which was then a small farming community -- though not nearly as remote as that of Crow Lake -- and spent summers at a cottage up north.

She studied psychology at McGill University in Montreal in the mid-sixties, and says that Montreal was an eye-opening experience after growing up in Blackwell. "We had the radio, but we had no television, and relative to what kids know today … they are just so much more knowledgeable than we were." She graduated in 1968 and went to England, finding work in a steel-industry research lab in London, which is where she met her husband, Richard.

Published under the "New Face of Fiction" program at age 55, Lawson calls herself a "late starter," though she began writing when her sons were small. She joined a creative-writing class, which she continues to attend, mainly for the companionship, and she took literature courses to study other writers. She describes the first novel she wrote, which was set in England, as a disaster: though it was a good story with characters and plot, she didn't know what she wanted to say. "It was a story without a point."

Then her parents fell ill with cancer, and she spent a lot of time in Canada. She started writing Crow Lake shortly after the double trauma of her parents dying and her sons leaving home. "I was thinking a lot about the passing of time and different types of loss and the importance of family and the significance of childhood. I think you are particularly receptive when you are a kid, and you take in not just the physical landscape, but the society and the culture and what matters to people. And it all just sits there -- eventually, if you are a writer, it comes out."

At length, a short story she wrote in the 1980s for Woman's Realm magazine in England was transformed into Crow Lake. She sent the manuscript out several times before it found the right agent, who then responded enthusiastically within twenty-four hours. The characters in the novel are entirely invented, with the exception of the baby, Bo, who was modelled closely on her own little sister. She was interested in exploring the brother-sister relationship and the notion that family members establish roles for one another which are hard to break free from ("In my family…I'm the 'Emoter'," she notes). In particular, she wanted to look at hero worship and what happens "to the worshipper and to the hero" when the hero fails. While indebted to J. D. Salinger for pointing her towards using children as a subject, and to Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird for the technique of writing a book with a child as narrator, Lawson says it was having her own children that taught her that people are born as individuals.

With its powerful emotional resonance, Crow Lake has already won the hearts of many readers, and Lawson's next novel will be anxiously awaited.

7 comments:

  1. I loved this book! Mary Lawson does an amazing job at developing her characters and making the reader really feel the emotions of Kate, the main character. I really enjoyed reading "Crow Lake" and following Kate's journey of learning to accept her older brother for who he's become.
    -Christina H, DCHS

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  2. I totally agree! This book was really great!
    Kaitlin W, DCHS

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  3. I loved this book so much!
    Andrea B(DCHS)

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  4. I really liked this book! At first I was a little thrown off that she was flipping back and forth between memories and present, but then I found that it really added to the book! Normally I don't like stories that move back and forth between past and present. But this story was so well written that I enjoyed it immensely! - Lisa (WCHS)

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  5. I really liked the book, though the time jumps were a bit confusing. I was very impressed that I was hooked throughout the whole thing while there wasn't a whole lot of action.

    Sarah(WCHS)

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  6. I loved this book. It was a book where i wanted to keep reading to find out what happend next. I would definetly recommend it.
    Paige(DCHS)

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  7. I really enjoyed this book.When I finished it, I was left with a very good feeling. I love how that author wraps it up so well at the end. The characters lives were filled with so much disappointment and heartbreak yet you see them learn and grow and solve their differences.
    There is a constant but very subtle air of tension that you can feel throughout the book but it came too a very serene conclusion, that didn't make everything impossibly perfect, like a fairy tale, but made it real and made the characters content with each other and themselves. T
    he author did not waste one word. Every situation that was mentioned in the book carried so mush meaning to the overall story. I love how the present story of Kate's life and the story of her past were so intertwined throughout the book and how it progressed at a slow but appropriate pace, keeping you turning the pages.It is not an incredible and flashy storyline but it was rendered so well and that is what makes it so good.
    It was a great read.
    Lydia (DCHS)

    (wow that looks like a book report!)

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