Helwig, David Mystery Stories ISBN 13: 9780889843370

Mystery Stories - Softcover

9780889843370: Mystery Stories
View all copies of this ISBN edition:
 
 

Mystery Stories is inhabited by absence: dead friends, past childhoods and ex-lovers. Others, stunned, are left behind to navigate the pitfalls of memory, while trying to make sense of lives built by people who are no longer there. This collection is an intricate addition to Helwig's already large canon of rich, thoughtful stories populated by densely real people.

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.

From the Author:

5BUZZDecember

This column is all about me. The occasion? A new book of mine has just recently been published, a collection of short and not-so-short fiction called Mystery Stories.

So you can turn the page now or stay for the ride.

My first short story was published in Canadian Forum, a magazine once well known, now gone, a bit more than fifty years ago. Really. That long. And my only previous collection of short fiction, The Streets of Summer, was published in 1969. It was, of course, a different world then. It was the time when new Canadian publishers, House of Anansi, Coach House Press, Oberon Press, many others, were being founded and were bringing into print a new generation of writers. Margaret Laurence had become well-known, but names like Alice Munro, Margaret Atwood and Michael Ondaatje were brand new. The place to buy books in Toronto was Britnell's bookstore on Yong Street, Coles, the slightly raffish beginning of a Canadian chain, was further down Yonge. Soon, a few blocks away, Longhouse Books opened, an entire store selling nothing but Canadian books. In Montreal The Double Hook did the same thing. All over the country Canadian books were visible, popular, widely reviewed.

Around that time, with my friend Tom Marshall, I founded the Oberon Press annual collection of stories -- initially New Canadian Stories, soon to become Best Canadian Stories -- but I myself more or less stopped writing short fiction. Two or three stories in the new book come from those days, written in the period just after 1969 collection and before I was led astray by the impulse to write novels. In rereading these quiet stories I find myself face to face with an almost stranger, the different man I was in that other world. It's an odd experience.

It was only when I moved to PEI in 1996 that I returned to writing short fiction. In between I had lived much of my adult life, published poems and novels and some essays. A few weeks after I moved here and while sitting in the car alone one afternoon, I heard a mysterious voice. Speaking to me? Not exactly. But that voice and the new world of the Island embodied itself in the first short story I'd written for a very long time.

I didn't abandon novels, but increasingly the novella and the long story seemed to be the shape that my imaginings took on. I became aware that a lot of my new stories involved something enigmatic, and I began shaping a collection to be called Mystery Stories. The more recent ones have tended to be -- in the old theatrical phrase -- louder, faster and funnier.

In 1969, when The Streets of Summer came out it was reviewed in a handful of Canadian newspapers and a number of literary magazines and sold in bookstores like Britnells and the Longhouse. A couple of stories were adapted for broadcast by CBC Television. Now, of course, fewer newspapers review books, and though a few independent bookstores like Charlottetown's The Bookmark remain, most books are distributed through CHapters/Indigo and the internet retailers.

But Mystery Stories will not be on sale in Indigo. Tim Inkster, the strong-willed, long-suffering publisher at the Porcupine's Quill, has had serious disagreements with some of the company's business practices, and he refuses to sell to them. But independent bookstores still exist, and Mystery Stories will be available from what Inkster likes to call `the e-tailers' -- Amazon and the rest.

The bloggers who will serve as some of the book's main reviewers, were most of them not born when I began publishing fiction. Every year I hear of new writers, some young enough to be my grandchildren, who are developing their skills and demand attention. Mystery Stories is coming to birth in a new universe. If I want to go on writing -- and I do -- my work must seek its audience in the world as it is. And it will.

(David Helwig)
From the Back Cover:

These stories are peopled by revenants, shades of their characters' remembered lives, lovers who died, friends who betrayed them or whom they betrayed, apparitions in dreams, visions and voices that speak unexpectedly out of the past. The mystery of personality keeps them vividly present even when they are long dead. These are absences that contain lives: an artist, Reuben Sachs, who painted an image of a hanged man and a few weeks later shot himself, leaving an irreparable, indelible impression on the mind of a young neighbour. A blind man, in dreams, relives the beauty of the city of Venice, which he visited many years before but could not see. An independent woman, a boldly adventurous young war reporter, is reduced to an ancient, bedridden body who on her hundredth birthday finds a faint voice to ask a young visitor if he has seen `her book', indicating the record of her life which lies nearby on a table. A man thinks back to the day he, as small boy, hid on a staircase and looked down at a now long vanished fashionable crowd dancing and drinking at a New Year's celebration in 1950, in an old hotel owned by his parents, in which he will spend his entire childhood and youth.

These are varied and intricate tales told by observers and keepers of the past. The mystery they so sharply catch and elucidate is the essential one, each asking, What am I? What were those others who meant so much to me? What is this life that I have lived?

(Doris Cowan)

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.

  • PublisherPorcupine's Quill
  • Publication date2010
  • ISBN 10 0889843376
  • ISBN 13 9780889843370
  • BindingPaperback
  • Edition number1
  • Number of pages272

Top Search Results from the AbeBooks Marketplace

Seller Image

David Helwig
ISBN 10: 0889843376 ISBN 13: 9780889843370
New Soft cover First Edition Quantity: > 20
Seller:
The Porcupine's Quill
(Erin, ON, Canada)

Book Description Soft cover. Condition: New. 1st Edition. Original printed wraps. 272 pp. Octavo. Mystery Stories is inhabited by absence: dead friends, past childhoods and ex-lovers. Others, stunned, are left behind to navigate the pitfalls of memory, while trying to make sense of lives built by people who are no longer there. This collection is an intricate addition to Helwig's already large canon of rich, thoughtful stories populated by densely real people. Printed offset by Tim Inkster on the Heidelberg KORD at the printing office of the Porcupine's Quill in the Village of Erin, Wellington County, Ontario, Canada. Smyth sewn into 16-page signatures, with hand-tipped endleaves. Seller Inventory # 9780889843370

More information about this seller | Contact seller

Buy New
US$ 27.95
Convert currency

Add to Basket

Shipping: US$ 6.00
From Canada to U.S.A.
Destination, rates & speeds
Stock Image

Helwig, David
Published by Porcupines Quill (2010)
ISBN 10: 0889843376 ISBN 13: 9780889843370
New Paperback Quantity: 1
Seller:
Revaluation Books
(Exeter, United Kingdom)

Book Description Paperback. Condition: Brand New. 1st edition. 288 pages. 8.75x5.56x1.00 inches. In Stock. Seller Inventory # 0889843376

More information about this seller | Contact seller

Buy New
US$ 48.85
Convert currency

Add to Basket

Shipping: US$ 12.54
From United Kingdom to U.S.A.
Destination, rates & speeds