Friday, October 20, 2006

David Helwig responds

Response to an email I sent him to an address on the Porcupine's Quill website. Couldn't find the book online by cover description, so I emailed to ask what the white hardcover book with the binoculars on it was that I saw at the Borden Friendship Club. Posted with permission.

To: lauriefuhr@yahoo.ca
Subject: Unread books
Date: Thu, 19 Oct 2006 22:35:46 -0300

Hi Laurie,

The book is called Catchpenny Poems. I think that physically it's one of the most beautiful Oberon ever published. The poems in it won the CBC poetry award for 1983, and the book was published in that year.

I have only two copies, and one of them is the one my parents had, which I reclaimed after they died. Still like the poems.

Sure I'd love to read in Calgary sometime. I don't think I've ever read in Alberta, though I remember being in Calgary publicizing a novel and finding the city was empty after seven o'clock. Somebody told me they'd just used it for the set of a Superman movie. That was maybe not quite before you were born, but a while back.

Odd to think of those books sitting there in the cold waiting for someone to discover them. But they sure aren't going to let some uppity chick run away with them.


Cheers,


David


From: jgdh@pei.sympatico.ca
To: "Laurie Fuhr"
Subject: Re: Unred boks
Date: Fri, 20 Oct 2006 16:07:36 -0300

Laurie,

Answers to questions:

Sure, post the letter if you want. Not much to it.

In the Eighties I was published for a while by Viking Penguin. They are a big outfit that can afford to send writers for long distances to do publicity--which was what I was doing in Calgary when I went for a walk down dark and entirely empty streets between skyscrapers. Then I saw a weird light approaching--an empty streetcar. Passed by and vanished into the movies.

New stuff? I have a novel called Saltsea supposed to be out soon from Biblioasis and next fall PQ is doing a novella called Smuggling Donkeys.

I have lots of unpublished poems, but they might be a bit old-fashioned for your magazine.

You didn't ask, but you can find my website at davidhelwig.com.


Stay uppity and ornery.

Cheers,

David

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Canadian Literary Archives of the Borden Friendship Club

On October 7, my cousin Jenny got married in Saskatchewan to a cop with a silly nickname, who supposedly laughs when you say the word Jaguar if you believe the best man speech. Already I know more about Aaron than I do about Jenny, my extremely quiet cousin who is a maternity nurse. Maybe when you hear other people screaming all day (mothers, babies, doctors), you don't feel the need to fill the air with much noise yourself later.

Jenny's reception was held at the Borden Legion. The room where the meals were served was the Borden Friendship Club, which included an organ I couldn't help but dip around with after wine, especially since my Dad was enthusiastic (a sloppy rendition of Neil Young's Like a Hurricane is about the only organ thing I could come up with).

Later, Gareth and I were hanging out after he had become rather silly, and he grew increasingly alarmed about the interest I was taking in the library (a single bookcase) of the Borden Friendship Club. There, spines uncracked, utterly untouched by the passage of time (or people's hands for that matter), were a number of old rare poetry books. I'm not a used book expert like my friend David Collins, but here was a pristine first edition of Milton Acorn's Jackpine Sonnets, and one of a really bizarre early Don McKay book (Brick Books edition) called Lependu, which I'd never come across. They were all stamped 'Courtesy of the Canada Council'. There was a hardcover poetry book by David Helwig with binoculars on the cover, which I can't seem to figure out the name of (I've actually emailed poor David about it, will let you know what he says if he's still at that address) and an early Lorna Crozier. There was a lot more I didn't even get at good look at.

My gears were turning, so I found one of the people involved with the Friendship Club who was volunteering and asked if I could take a couple of the books for a donation to the Club, since it seemed no one ever read them. She agreed, saying she thought the Club would be much more pleased with the donation than with the books. If anyone had concerns, I told her, they could call me at the number on my cheque.

A few days later, the phone rang - a Saskatchewan number that wasn't my grandmother's. Uh oh. "This is Shirley Williams, treasurer of the Borden Friendship Club," she said in a strong, well-aged small town Saskatchewan accent (and there is such an accent, really). "We had a meeting and the fellows would like you to return their books as soon as possible." I apologized and said that the woman I had spoken to had thought it was okay. "The woman you talked with did not have the authority to give you those books," Shirley told me matter of factly. "Well, I really thought you wouldn't mind, considering the books had obviously never been read." "It's the principle of the thing," said Shirley. "We will not be treated like a shopping mall." Ouch! I felt like a horrible shoplifter.

I told Shirley she could keep the donation cheque, and that now that I know they like poetry, I would send some additional books along with those two I had taken for donation.


Whatever extra books I send, I know they'll be preserved for all time on the shelves of the Borden Friendship Club, as secure as the National Archives or moreso, since no one will likely ever touch them again.

If anyone should like to donate books to the Borden Friendship Club, here is their address:

Borden Friendship Club
c/o Shirley Williams
Box 96
Borden, SK S0K 0N0

I think it would be really amusing if they suddenly received an influx of poetry book donations from elsewhere in the country. :)


p.s. Geist has the 'Tirade by Way of Introduction' by Milton Acorn from his Jackpine Sonnets on the site linked above.

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Calgary MultiArts Variety Show #2 - March 24 07

The first one went so well, we have to do it again. Some things you do right you still do twice. :)
Thank you to everyone who was involved the first time.

#2 is Saturday, March 24 2007, 7 p.m. at The Soda.

Confirmed participants are The Russian Artist Factory, The Pine Tarts, Kessler Tidal, Sheri-D Wilson, Juanita Brandt, Naomi Burkhart, Aaron Leaney, Anita Athavale, Moe Clark, Chantal Vitalis, the return of Swallow a Bicycle Productions with another mind-altering theatre experience and more short films.

If you might be interested in performing or volunteering, please don't hesitate to get in touch even this early.


Thanks,

Laurie