Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Book Review: Canadian novelists embrace diversity: Linda Ghan's "Sos

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Book Review: Canadian novelists embrace diversity: Linda Ghan's "Sos

    The Gazette (Montreal)
    June 23, 2006 Friday
    Final Edition

    Canadian novelists embrace diversity: Linda Ghan's Sosi, like works
    by Yann Martel and Camilla Gibb, reconciles religious identities

    PAT DONNELLY, The Gazette

    Sosi, by Linda Ghan, Signature Editions, 222 pages, $19.95.

    - - -

    Linda Ghan's novel Sosi, like Camilla Gibb's Sweetness in the Belly
    and Yann Martel's Life of Pi, is a tale told by an orphan torn
    between conflicting visions of the world.

    The intent is admirable. But the execution here is not as smooth as
    in Martel's book, nor is it as deeply convincing as Gibb's. Still,
    Sosi is a warm, embracing read, leavened with a wry sense of humour.

    Sosi, like Gibb's Lilly, is raised by people whose background is
    different from that of her parents. She is born to an Armenian
    Christian mother and a Turkish Muslim father who see to it, before
    they are murdered, that she is handed over to a kind-hearted Jewish
    couple - the Reijskinds. In Sweetness in the Belly, after the death
    of Lilly's British parents, she is brought up in a mosque in Morocco
    by a kindly Sufi Muslim scholar. Martel's Pi Patel, who loses his
    parents in a shipwreck, reconciles several religions in his mind as
    he drifts across the ocean on a raft with a tiger.

    Welcome to post-colonial, post-provincial CanLit in a globalized
    world. Diversity to the max.

    Sosi, whose Turkish name is Zeyneb, or "blessed one," reverts to her
    Armenian name, Sosi Arta, as part of her strategy to avoid marrying a
    Turkish boy whom she does not like. When her adoptive family moves to
    Jerusalem, she meets and falls in love with Ara, a young Armenian
    photographer with political inclinations. He wants to return to
    Turkey to record evidence of the persecution of Armenians, which has
    continued many years after the genocide of 1915-16. Shortly after the
    birth of their baby, he leaves, on a false passport, to pursue his
    quest.

    Sosi soon loses hope of his return and moves to Montreal with their
    daughter Sammi, determined to make a fresh start. Her reasoning is
    based on a idealist's view of Canada: "Sammi would grow up in a
    country that had no massacres, no wars, no genocides. She would speak
    their language, learn their stories, and play their games. She would
    know only songs of life. She had a right to know nothing of the
    history that had consumed her father, nothing of those who had driven
    him to it: you couldn't know so much about dying and not belong to
    it."

    Sosi's rebellion against the past leads to her discovery of booze,
    cigarettes, jazz and illicit romance in Montreal. Her adventures
    allow the author, who has lived in Montreal off and on for many
    years, a wonderful opportunity to write about familiar haunts within
    the time frame of the 1950s.

    Ghan's writing, like her life, has been all over the map. Brought up
    Jewish in Weyburn, Sask., she taught in Jamaica for several years
    before moving to Montreal, where she produced a radio show, taught
    creative writing at Concordia and wrote plays. Her children's play,
    Muhla, The Fair One, was produced by Black Theatre Workshop. She once
    served a term as president of the Federation of English Writers of
    Quebec (FEWQ). In 1996, she moved to Japan. She continued her career
    as a journalist and teacher at Ibaraki University, where she led the
    Canadian Studies department, and became a literary journalist,
    writing for Japanese daily newspapers.

    Her first novel was A Gift of Sky (1989). Her most recent book was
    Gaston Petit: The Kimono and the Cross (2002), based on a series of
    interviews with Petit, a Dominican priest.

    Sosi is dedicated to the memory of noted Montreal carpet merchant
    Kerop Bedoukian, whom Ghan became friends with after interviewing him
    on her radio program. He was a survivor of the Armenian genocide who
    helped other Armenians escape to Canada during the 1950s.

    Bedoukian's stories formed the main inspiration for this book. Sosi
    takes us on an emotionally eventful journey from Turkey to Israel to
    Canada. That this young woman's struggle to transcend history
    eventually finds a peaceful equilibrium offers comfort to the reader,
    perhaps a little too easily. Ghan slips, occasionally, into
    pulp-fiction glib.

    Her summary of Middle Eastern politics seen through the eyes of an
    Israeli-Armenian character is overly simplistic: "She had gone to
    school with Baha'i, Greek Orthodox, Abyssinian, Muslim, Jew, Catholic
    Armenian and Gregorian Armenian. They had learned each other's
    languages; they had respected each other's church bells, chants,
    prayers and holy days - until the British came along with
    simultaneous offers of a homeland to the Jews and sovereignty to the
    Arabs, allowing the Arabs to attack the Jews, and the Jews to
    counterattack the Arabs, betraying them both and pulling out when
    they were asked by the United Nations to oversee the peace. Now we,
    the Armenians, were caught in the middle, of secondary consideration
    in the old city as well as in the new Israel."

    Much of the charm of the novel lies in the fact that Sosi, like Pi
    Patel, Lilly, little orphan Annie and Oliver Twist before them, is
    almost impossible to dislike.

    In fact, if it weren't for the inclusion of Sosi's X-rated adventures
    in Montreal, the book could be mistaken for teen literature.

    [email protected]

    GRAP HIC:
    Photo: SIGNATURE EDITIONS; Linda Ghan's career, and her life, have
    been all over the map.
Working...
X