The Weirds acquired their surname through a series of events that some
would call coincidence and others would call fate.
Sterling D. Wyird, in
the process of emigrating from England to Canada, worked his way across the
Atlantic aboard the Icelandic fishing trawler Örlög. Inclement weather and empty nets made the six-week journey
three months long. When Sterling finally stepped onto the freshly built planks
of Pier 21 in Halifax he presented his papers to an immigration guard who, just
that morning, had met the woman destined to be his wife. This guard, in a stroke
of either inspiration or absent-mindedness, changed the y in Sterling’s last name to an e.
Seventy-seven years later, as his great-grandchildren gathered for the final
game of their high school football team’s season, the spelling mistake
remained. They were still Weird.
Whereas I hadn’t previously heard of his second
novel, The Tiny Wife (Madras Press,
2010), I am an enormous fan of the fiction Toronto writer Andrew Kaufman has
previously published, including his first novel, All My Friends Are Superheroes (Toronto ON:
Coach House Books, 2003) and The Waterproof Bible (Toronto ON: Random House Canada, 2010) [see my review of such here]. There is just
something in how Kaufman manages to write tender stories of family chaos and
conflict merged with elements of fantasy that is entirely rare in fiction. No
matter how outlandish and oddball his characters or plots might become, they
all become a means to an end, focusing stories on what the heart wants. I’m constantly amazed at the ease in his writing, and how easily his stories begin; his
humour, and incredible concepts. In Born Weird (Toronto ON: Random House Canada, 2013), we are introduced
to the five Weird siblings: Richard, Abba, Lucy, Kent and Angie, as well as
their grandmother, Annie Weird. As Annie lay in her hospital bed, she convinces
her granddaughter, Angie, to visit and admits to bestowing each of the children
a power at birth, each of which has become a curse. She gives Angie a quest: to
reunite all five siblings in less than two weeks, the day Annie claims she is
going to die. If all five children are in the room when she dies, the curse on
each will be lifted.
What makes Kaufman’s stories so compelling, in
part, is in the kind of physical and emotional detail he adds to give his
characters breadth, and the ways in which we see the often very real results of
such small decisions. Kaufman’s characters understand consequence, sometimes in
such a real way that it becomes overwhelming. They understand consequence, and
real loss. In such short spaces, he brings entirely to life the emotional
turbulances, nuances and contradictions of family relations, and, despite
sparing little detail, we aren’t overwhelmed by irrelevancies. The only
information brought to the page are the essential ones.
In 1963 Angie’s
grandfather Samuel D. Weird founded the Grace Taxi Service. He named the
enterprise after his mother. When Besnard took over the business, in 1982, it
had grown into the second largest fleet in the city of Toronto.
Over time Besnard
developed many theories about taxis. For one, he believed that you should make
a wish while hailing a cab. If the first taxi that passed by stopped and picked
you up, your wish would come true. He also felt that every taxi ride was
metaphorical—that it could be interpreted, like tea leaves or the lines in your
palm. But his most firmly held theory was that your choice of taxi was a
reflection of how you saw yourself. Of all his theories, this was the one that
had been most firmly passed on to his children.
“No visible dents or
scratches,” Angie said. She circled the cab slowly.
“You still do this?”
“I would have liked a
newer model,” Angie said as she came back around to the back passenger door.
“Not in this town.”
“Really?”
“’Fraid so.”
“Okay, let’s take it,”
Angie said. She slid into the back seat. “To the airport,” she told the driver.
From the three I’ve now read of his works,
Kaufman seems quite attracted to the idea of the quest, of someone who is lost
that needs to be found, and of transformative power of airplanes (specifically
the non-stop Vancouver-Toronto flight, which, heading in the opposite
direction, featured heavily in All My
Friends Are Superheroes). The novel moves with an ease, an entirely natural
flow, given the strange twists and turns through the plot of Angie Weird’s
quest to reunite her four siblings together in their grandmother’s hospital
room within two weeks. The only turn that felt odd was once their main quest
had finished, near the end of the book, and the sub-quest began, being the
quest to end the main quest. The transition between the end of their
grandmother’s quest and the final passage through the plot felt strange, and
nearly tacked-on. Otherwise, this was a magnificent novel, working through
Kaufman’s fascination with family relationships and their long-standing
conflicts, quests, redemptions and air travel. Where might he go next?
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