sewn paper
e-mail the Author |
CarnivalHarold RhenischPoet, bioregional essayist, and explorer of post-colonial landscapes in
decay and transition, Harold Rhenisch combines his father's character with
his own, and in a series of luminous, closely-linked stories, takes the
reader on an emotional journey through humour, joy, heartbreak, horror,
spiritual catastrophe and redemption, to present a second look at history.
This is war from a child's eyes, up close and personal, from silly pranks,
to playing war games in the forest and, finally, to miracles of healing
as the fabric of the world collapses and must be rebuilt.
Hansel, his mother, and their 16-year-old Russian maid,
tend an escaped French P.O.W. in their basement in a small town on the
edge of the Black Forest during the Second World War. During the Occupation,
this act simultaneously saves their lives and also brings them close to
death, as they attempt to save the innkeeper's daughter after a brutal
rape by occupying Moroccan soldiers and the horrific punishment enacted
upon them by the French command. This story is not fiction. It is the art
of story-telling that creates for us Hansel's fairytale village -- at once
a magical world of mermaids, witches, carnival characters and eelfishers,
and also a sulfur-choked, brutalized wartime town.
The Canadian farmer who was Hansel returns to this German town to relive
the dreams, stories, and terrors he experienced fifty years before. In
incandescent, emotionally-charged prose he seeks among the ruins of society
to understand love and his place in the world as a man. This is a powerful
and captivating evocation of innocence and storytelling from one of Canada's
master prose stylists. `A similar reverence for the anecdotal past occasionally sabotages Harold
Rhenisch's otherwise brilliant Carnival The book's genesis was
apparently long and arduous. In 1984 Rhenisch taped his father's
troubling stories of life in a small town in Southern Germany during
World War II. Rhenisch put the stories together by 1987, but did not
publish them for another 11 years, learning German, traveling to Germany
and slowly realizing that his father's original form was irretrievable.
Instead, Rhenisch decided to "enter" his father to "help him understand
the more difficult parts of his story," even as his father brought out
the hidden roots of Rhenisch's own story.
`The results are often nothing less than astounding. In a wartime town
made claustrophobic by the transformation of men into uniformed "angels"
and a house made claustrophobic by the split between husband and wife,
young Hansel must find his way around as the darkness comes looking for
him. He becomes familiar with all manner of mystery and degradation, as
the police use the maid Maryushka sexually, the Moroccan soldiers rape
and kill his girlfriend, and our Leader's portrait begins to weep tears.
Hansel's father tells him that "the world is built out of force ...
without force you cannot make anything," and joins the Nazis in hope of
a material success that never comes. His mother, a physician, but
stigmatized by divorce, struggles to survive, and goes so far as to
marry the abusive Blaumann to put bread on the table.
`According to the book's back cover, Rhenisch is one of Canada's master
prose stylists, and that's not far off, even if you haven't heard of
him: "You do not see angels going around with a bucket of glue, a mop
and a bunch of handbills, plastering them on the wall: `You Cannot Have
a Bicycle'; `God Is Not Making Any More Bicycles. God Has Guns to Make
with the Steel.' What happens here is what happens with God; what
happens with God happens here. It is our war. We have melted all our
bicycles down and dropped them on London. There are many children there
who do not have a mom because of our bicycles falling from the sky. It
rains bicycles. The sky was so choked up with bicycles that they start
to rain, a hard, hard rain!"' |
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Harold Rhenisch is the author of the innovative history
Out of the Interior: the Lost Country, an Out of Africa about
a life on the fruit plantations in the mountain valleys of British Columbia.
He has also written eight books of poetry and a collection of Coyote and
trickster myths.
Rhenisch was raised in the German farm culture of the Okanagan, which
sheltered both the innocent and the damned. Grandson of a communist from
the '20s and two German doctors from Freiburg, he grew up into a world
of story-telling, shame, and pride. With twenty-two years experience farming
fruit in the Okanagan Valley, Rhenisch now lives in the Cariboo, the high
plateau between the Fraser and Thompson Rivers. |
The Porcupine's Quill is remarkable in Canadian publishing in that most of the physical production
of our books is completed in-house at the shop on the Main Street of Erin Village.
We print on a twenty-five inch Heidelberg KORD, typically onto acid-free Zephyr Antique laid.
The sheets are then folded, and sewn into signatures on a 1907 model Smyth National Book Sewing machine.