Leo Brent Robillard is an award-winning author and educator. His
novels include Leaving Wyoming, which
was listed in Bartley’s Top Five in the Globe
and Mail for Best First Fiction; Houdini’s Shadow, which was translated into Spanish; and, Drift, which was long-listed for the Relit Award. The Road To Atlantis is his most recent
novel – tracing a family’s dissolution and healing following a tragic accident.
He lives in Eastern Ontario with his wife and two children.
Q: How did Backwater
Review first start?
A: While attending Carleton University, I had
the opportunity to edit the small literary journal Box 77. It was produced by the English Literature Society. I began
there as a proofreader and member of the editorial board, then took over as editor
of the magazine for three issues. I graduated from Carleton University in 1996,
and this put an end to my involvement with that publication. But I guess you
could say that I had been bitten by the bug.
I come from a small town in Eastern Ontario.
Prior to my time at Carleton, and my move to Ottawa as a young man, I had no
inclination about the existence of a Canadian literary scene. That there were
other people like me – writers and poets – was a revelation. I couldn’t let it
go.
I had made many friends who were involved in
writing and publishing during my Ottawa years – people from the Ottawa scene,
and others who had passed through the city’s various Reading Series like TREE,
Sasquatch, or The Dusty Owl. I suppose my way of staying in touch was the creation
of Backwater Review.
I’m sure that my initial vision was much
grander. I was young and fired up about writing. I wrote in my first editorial:
“Here you will discover the future conscience of a nation, of a time, of a
place. This is a spawning ground for words.”
My goal was to have it distributed nationally.
And it was. You could find it in magazine shops and bookstores from St. John’s
to Victoria. We ran annual writing contests and gathered a few advertisers to
help finance it.
And, you know, we did publish some very good
writing. Especially poetry.
Q: I didn’t know you were part of Box 77! I remember Warren Layberry and
Steve Zytveld, and even had work in there… Did you base Backwater Review on any journals in particular? What were your
models? What other journals or presses existed around at the time?
A: I was reading stuff from all corners back
then. I had a great deal of respect – and still do – for the long-running
established journals like Grain, The Fiddlehead, Prairie Fire and The Malahat Review. If anything, I was modelling Backwater
on their successful formats and appearances. I wouldn’t ever have called Backwater “edgy.” It was always about
the writing. We weren’t trying to “be” anything. It was really more like, “If
you build it, they will come.”
There were a number of journals cropping up all
over the place back then. In Ottawa alone I remember your above/ground press
offerings like Missing Jacket and Stanzas; there was Bywords and Hostbox and Hook & Ladder and Box 77. There was a funky little number
called Graffitifish. The Carleton Arts Review was something
back then, too. But one of my favourites
was Richard Carter’s short-lived Yield.
He really had a particular aesthetic in mind.
When you mention literary scenes, people default
to Toronto or Vancouver. But there was a lot going on in Ottawa.
Q: I agree completely. During the mid-1990s (a
couple of years before Backwater
emerged) there were a dozen self-described literary journals in Ottawa, and
yet, we keep being overlooked as a literary centre. Have you any thoughts on
why that might be?
A: It certainly isn’t for a shortage of good
writers – Andre Alexis, Elizabeth Hay, Alan Cumyn, Mark Frutkin, Charlotte
Gray, Brian Doyle... All these people live or have lived in Ottawa. And they
are only the ones who jump immediately to mind. But beyond established writers,
what a healthy literary journal scene suggests is dynamism, vibrancy and
promise for the future. This is where writers cut their teeth. The discussions
that take place in these small literary collectives help shape and foment the
country's eventual aesthetic.
It has been said that all great writers got
their start in a small magazine. It is certainly true that Backwater published some eventual heavy hitters. For instance, Tim
Bowling went on to win the CAA Award for Poetry and was several times
short-listed for the Governor General’s Award, and even The Writer’s Trust for The Tinsmith. Stephanie Bolster won the
Governor General’s Award for White Stone
– which contained poems originally published in Backwater. Claire Mulligan’s The Reckoning of Boston Jim was short-listed for the Giller in 2007. And
Russell Thornton is short-listed for this year’s Griffin Prize. This is but a
partial list. You, yourself appeared in the magazine, and have gone on to win
the CAA/Air Canada Award, as well as the John Newlove Award. Susan Elmslie won
the A.M. Klein Prize. All of these writers graced the pages of Backwater in its brief three-year
existence.
And many of them – if not actually from Ottawa –
passed through one of its myriad Reading Series. That’s how they learned about Backwater. I remember personally
soliciting Tim Bowling and Stephanie Bolster after sets they read in downtown
Ottawa pubs.
So as for being over-looked, your guess is as
good as mine. But it probably has something to do with book publishing and
money. Chaudiere Books must find it pretty lonely, for instance, as a book
publisher in Ottawa.
Q: What are you most proud of the journal
accomplishing? What are your frustrations? What had you been hoping to achieve?
A: I am most proud that good writers considered
submitting to it. I never felt that Backwater
had to settle. George Murray, John B. Lee, D.C. Reid – we had an embarrassment
of riches from which to choose.
In some respects, this ties in to what we hoped
to achieve. We gave good writing another venue. There can never be enough
opportunity to promote Canadian writers and writing.
And of course, this is also linked to the
greatest frustration. At its height, Backwater
had a little over 200 subscribers – but most of these people were writers
themselves. I suspect even those who picked it up in a bookstore were writers,
more often than not, looking for another potential market.
I see small press journals as literature’s best
kept secret. I suppose that I had hoped without strategy or success to change
that. But poetry, and good literature in general, are a hard sell. People like
to digest their entertainment passively, and these things require engagement,
reflection and time.
The same awards I’ve been mentioning here –
while equally vital to writing and publishing – can sometimes be a limiting
force as well. Readers, too often, use them as to do lists. If you aren’t on
those lists, you don’t get “done.”
But I don’t want to sound bitter or
melancholic. Because I’m not. Journals remain relevant for a different reason.
I can see that now. They are valuable for their sense of peer review and writer
development. They validate writers and their writing at an important stage in
their growth. The beginning.
Q: Did your time producing Backwater Review have any effect on how you approached your own
writing?
A: When I completed my first novel in 2003, I
knew exactly where I was going to submit it. I think I might even have known as
I embarked upon writing it. Backwater didn’t
just receive good manuscripts; as a review outlet, we received a lot of great
books as well. I became very attuned to the market for fiction and poetry in
the Canadian literary press. Much more than I am now. Turnstone published
fantastic books, and I knew that my style of writing would appeal to them. I
knew the moment that I finished reading Margaret Sweatman’s Sam & Angie, which I reviewed for Backwater, that Turnstone was the place
for my work. By complete coincidence, Sharon Caseburg was their Acquisitions
Editor at that time (and still is). We had published her poetry years earlier
in Backwater. I don’t think that had
any bearing on my eventual publication contract – and I certainly wasn’t aware
of this particular connection when I sent my work off – but I’m sure that name
recognition and familiarity may have gotten the manuscript out of the dreaded
slush pile. A decade and four novels later, I am still publishing with them.
So I am not sure if editing made me approach
writing differently in a stylistic sense. But I am sure that it made me take my
work more seriously. More professionally. I began to understand that good
writing took on many different forms, and that there were venues for each of
those forms. In a way, my growing knowledge of the literary landscape legitimized
what I was already doing. I knew I had a place and a potential audience.
Of course, it never hurts to read, and to read
good writing in all of its forms, either. As an editor, I had no better
opportunity to do just that. Did I learn anything from that apprenticeship –
even at a subconscious level? Maybe. Probably.
Q: What was behind the decision to suspend the
journal?
A: Time. And maybe money. But mostly time. My
daughter was born in December of 1999. So I was a new father, a new teacher. I
had moved away from Ottawa, and didn’t have the same network of writers and reviewers
around me. Unless you’ve ever produced a small press journal with a skeletal workforce
of volunteers, you can’t imagine the amount of work. Throw in diaper changing, sleepless
nights, and 75 essays waiting to marked, and well…
We actually had a Volume IV planned. The
submissions were in. We had the artwork. But we were just exhausted. My wife, a
translator and teacher, was the assistant editor, so she was living everything
that I was living. And basically, life just got in the way.
I resurrected Backwater briefly back in 2007, as an online review outlet for
Canadian books. But was forced to take another hiatus. This past summer, I
revamped the blog entirely (backwaterreview.blogspot.ca).
I post to it at least once a week on Sundays. I still review Canadian literary
press books. Sometimes I post essays, or travel pieces, or snippets of
something else. But the focus is reviews. It’s work. But a lot less. And it’s
fun. Always was. Always will be.
Backwater
Review bibliography:
Volume I, Number 1. Spring/Summer 1997. Editor:
L. Brent Robillard. Assistant Editor: Leslie G. Holt. Copy Editor: Caroline
Bergeron. Poems by Stephanie Bolster, Ian Whistle, Lisl Swinehart, jason cobb,
Behrouz Fallahi, rob mclennan, Richard Carter, Christl Verduyn and Caitlin
Hewitt-White. Fiction by Dan Doyle, Matt Holland and Claire Mulligan. Interview
with rob mclennan by L. Brent Robillard. Reviews by Naomi Watson-Laird, Donna
Sorfleet, Richard Carter, Leslie G. Holt, rob mclennan and L. Brent Robillard.
Volume I, Number 2. Fall/Winter 1997. Editor:
L. Brent Robillard. Assistant Editor: Caroline Bergeron. Copy Editor: Steve
McKibbin. Poems by John B. Lee, Craig Carpenter, Brian Riggs, Susan Elmslie,
Tim Bowling, Richard Carter, Stephanie Bolster, Jennifer Gavin. Fiction by
Claudia Graf and Larry Rowdan. Interview with Susan Elmslie by L. Brent
Robillard. Reviews by Paul Sorfleey, Carl Mills, rob mclennen, Richard Carter,
Donna Sorfleet, and L. Brent Robillard.
Volume II, Number 1. Spring/Summer 1998.
Editor: L. Brent Robillard. Assistant Editors: Caroline Bergeron and Richard
Carter. Poetry by Alison Watt, Jason Rama, Paul Benza, Merilyn Lerch, Joe
Blades, Claire Latremouille, Russell Thornton, Edith Van Berkley, and Errol
Miller. Fiction by Tsigane Bristol, Rita Donovan, and Cliff Burns. Interview
with Rita Donovan by L. Brent Robillard. Reviews by Carl Mills, Richard Carter,
Nancy Leech, and L. Brent Robillard.
Volume II, Number 2. Fall/Winter 1998. Editor:
L. Brent Robillard. Assistant Editor: Caroline Bergeron. Poems by George
Murray, Susan McCaslin, Jason G. Santerre, Stephanie Bolster, Matt Santateresa
and Russell Thornton. Fiction by Richard Scarsbrook, Stan Rogal and Marguerite
Carrière. Interview with Stephanie Bolster by L. Brent Robillard. Reviews by
Mausumi Banerjee, Nancy Keech and L. Brent Robillard.
Volume III, Number 1. Spring/Summer 1999.
Editor: L. Brent Robillard. Assistant Editor: Caroline Bergeron. Poems by Keith
Ebsary, Tony Cosier, rob mclennan, D.C. Reid, Antonia Banyard, Betsy Symons,
Brian Burke, Jason Rama, Ronnie R. Brown and Margaret Malloch Zielinski.
Fiction by Suki Lee and Michael Bryson. Interview with D.C. Reid by L. Brent
Robillard. Reviews by Mausumi Banerjee, Nancy Keech and L. Brent Robillard.
Volume III, Number 2. Fall/Winter 1999. Editor:
L. Brent Robillard. Assistant Editor: Caroline Bergeron. Poetry by Flanagan
Wolff, Damien Potter, Astrid van der Pol, Michael Trussler, Sharon Caseburg,
and Lyle Weiss. Fiction by Aliki Tryphonopoulos, Randy Schroeder, and Anne
Burke. Interview with John Buschek by L. Brent Robillard. Reviews by Jesse
Craig Bellringer, monna mcdiarmid, and L. Brent Robillard.
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