Authors: Richard B. Wright
Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Historical, #General
For P again,
With love and gratitude
And if the worldly forget you,
say to the silent earth: I flow.
To the swift water say: I am.
—Rainer Maria Rilke
The Sonnets to Orpheus
HarperCollins e-book exclusive extras:
1934
Nora left for New York City today.
1935
Thank you for the brooch.
1936
Happy New Year!!!
1937
A blustery day and I spent a good part of the afternoon visiting. . .
1938
Awakened in the night by the wind and this morning I looked out. . .
Wiry and slight, Richard B. Wright sits half-swallowed by a large armchair in his Toronto hotel. For someone who’s just swept the Double Crown of Canadian fiction, winning both the $25,000 Giller Prize and the $15,000 Governor General’s Award for fiction for his ninth novel,
Clara Callan
, the sixty-four-year-old former teacher and book salesman seems remarkably phlegmatic. He admits that all the media attention has given him an interesting glimpse of fame — “For a little while, all the lenses are trained on you; when the phone rings, it’s for you.”
But he also gives the impression that, once an upcoming Ontario-Manitoba tour is out of the way, he’ll be glad to get back to the humdrum routines of a writer’s day. “I think I’m fairly grounded in the ordinary realities of life,” he says. “That’s where I come from, and that’s where I believe we must find our happiness — in the quotidian. Not in these feast days.”
Somehow, you can imagine his brisk, no-nonsense heroine, Clara Callan, saying just that. At a time when other Canadian writers have been turning out ambitious novels on such titanic subjects as
Hiroshima or the First World War, Wright has stuck faithfully to the kind of modest focus that has sustained his thirty-year career. An unmarried schoolteacher in 1930s Ontario, Clara is the sort of woman who used to be dismissed, if not outright pitied, for a life in which it was widely assumed nothing much happened.
Wright shows otherwise, burrowing into Clara’s hidden reserves of passion with a skill that makes her one of the most compelling heroines of recent Canadian fiction. Phyllis Bruce, Wright’s editor at HarperCollins, recalls her excitement at first reading Wright’s manuscript: “He caught the female sensibility in a way most male writers never do. I hadn’t felt that so strongly since I’d read Brian Moore’s
The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne
.”
Bruce also praises
Clara Callan
’s “technically brilliant” use of letters and diary entries to catch the speech idioms and social atmosphere of the 1930s. It’s an era that has a strong hold on Wright’s imagination. He was born near the end of it, in 1937, in Midland, Ontario, one of five children in a working-class family. Growing up in the Forties, he felt haunted by the previous decade, not only because his parents talked about it, but because “we were still surrounded by the artifacts of the Thirties — the stoves and iceboxes and radios and big, heavy cars that were no longer manufactured during the war, when the economy switched to military production. There was still a Thirties ambience.”
Wright says he never wanted to be a writer as a boy. A poor student, he preferred history to English classes where, as he puts it, “we tortured poems like Browning’s ‘My Last Duchess’ to death.” But he began to read on his own, thrilling to such finds as Hemingway’s short stories, J. D. Salinger’s
The Catcher in the Rye
, and Harold Robbins’ potboilers, which helped ignite a lifelong fascination with New York — the city where Clara’s younger sister, Nora, becomes a radio actor and minor celebrity.
In the mid-’50s Wright enrolled in radio and television arts at Toronto’s Ryerson Institute of Technology, and toyed with the idea
of writing for the small screen. It was only after graduation — and short stints toiling for a small-town newspaper and radio station — that he joined the publishing house Macmillan of Canada in Toronto and began to imagine himself as an author. “I had the job of reading through the slush pile, and I loved it, because as bad as these manuscripts were, I just wanted to be close to writers.”
In 1968, he was a salesman for Macmillan when he quit to write his first novel,
The Weekend Man
. Upon its publication in 1970, this modest but very funny tale of a salesman who hates his job made little impression in Canada, but received warm praise when it appeared in the United States the following year. It was the beginning of a career that would draw a loyal if relatively small readership. Wright has always had to work at other jobs to support his family — he and his librarian wife, Phyllis, have two grown sons. “I’ve never expected to make my living as a writer,” he says.
Writer Robert Fulford, a member of the Giller Prize jury, thinks that Wright’s novels “have from the beginning deserved more attention in this country than they’ve had.” Many readers have been kept away, Fulford suspects, by Wright’s focus on ordinary lives. “If you were to summarize the subjects of his novels, you would never say they were dramatic or sensational. You might even think there was nothing there. But there’s a great deal there. Two months after reading
Clara Callan
, I still had all its characters in my head.”
The four years it took to write
Clara Callan
coincided with the final stretch of Wright’s twenty-year teaching career at Ridley College in St. Catharines, Ontario, where he and Phyllis have continued to live since his retirement last spring. He usually rose at 4:45 each morning to peck away for a couple of hours on his vintage electric typewriter before heading off to the classroom. At first, he had trouble finding the novel’s voice, but throughout his struggles one idea remained constant: he wanted Clara to have an affair in the Toronto of the 1930s. “It was a very different city at that time — Protestant, uptight, and Orange, like a little Belfast,” he says. “I wanted to explore the
corruption of the spirit created by that kind of puritanism.”
He also wanted to convey Clara’s pluck in standing up to all that. There is a passage in the book Wright is particularly fond of that catches his heroine’s state of mind after she leaves an assignation with her lover. Confides Clara to her diary: “I am not eighteen years old. I am thirty-four, and have chosen to become involved with a married man. And so there will always be this hurrying from one place to another, with a run in my stocking and that look from the desk clerk as we go out the door.”
This moment connects to another of Wright’s purposes. He wanted to show how hard life was for people in the Thirties, and not just because of the Depression. “A lot of women under forty or even fifty don’t realize what life was like in the pre-pill era,” he says. “Women were often absolutely terrified of an unwanted pregnancy. It could end your career, ruin your life.”
Editor Bruce watched
Clara Callan
make this point when she asked several younger women in her publishing office to read it. “A lot of these women are post-feminist, and inclined to be critical of feminist thinking. But
Clara Callan
opened their eyes. One told me that she suddenly understood from the texture of Clara’s life how much women were denied by society. By telling what appears to be a period story, Richard has written a book that appeals deeply to younger women.”
Surely one reason Clara is so alive to readers is that she was so alive to Wright. “I thought of her constantly,” he says of the years of composition. “I’d be talking with someone at school, and my mind would drift to her, to whatever difficulties she was in.” Interestingly, he never imagined Clara clearly in a visual sense. “I only knew that she was tall, not unattractive, with short dark hair. What really interested me was her emotional appearance. Beneath all that rectitude was a passion for life, and an awareness of the passing of time.”
Wright believes that time is the common subject of all his books. He frames the central question of our Western, atheist society this way:
“When we lose the idea of immortality, what do we do with time — the small amount of time that is our life?” That is the conundrum faced by the hero of
The Weekend Man
, who resents his life being eaten up by the trivialities of his job. And that is the problem confronted by Clara Callan, who senses her sexuality and her taste for adventure withering inside her.
Wright is frankly admiring of Clara for coming to grips with her longings in an unconventional way. “I like exploring characters like Clara who take hold of the present, who don’t live in the future, or pine unnecessarily for the past, both of which are snares and delusions. That is really what I’ve been writing about for most of my life, I think.”
Copyright © 2001 by John Bemrose. Reprinted with permission.
The Giller Prize: Canada’s Premier Literary Prize
At a gala dinner and award ceremony that drew over 450 members of the publishing, media, and arts communities, Richard B. Wright was named the 2001 winner of The Giller Prize, Canada’s premier literary prize for fiction.
Richard B. Wright’s winning novel,
Clara Callan
, is a Phyllis Bruce Book, published by Harper
Flamingo
Canada. The largest annual prize for fiction in the country, The Giller Prize awards $25,000 each year to the author of the best Canadian novel or short story collection published in English.
Of the winning book, the jury remarked, “
Clara Callan
illumines, by way of a diary and letters, the inner life of an Ontario village school teacher of the 1930s, when ‘spinster’ and ‘respectable’ meant constricted emotions and a glum existence.
“In this atmosphere Clara enacts her private drama of doomed adulterous love and single motherhood with stoic heroism. Running parallel with and counterpointing Clara’s life is Nora’s — she is the sister who got away.
“An understated, graceful writer who never makes a false step, Richard B. Wright is a master at revealing the small dramas that unfold in what might appear to others as an unremarkable life. In
Clara Callan
he has achieved and accomplished an utterly convincing novel.”
The Canada Council for the Arts Announces the Winners of the
2001 Governor General’s Literary Awards
The Canada Council for the Arts announced today the names of the winners of the 2001 Governor General’s Literary Awards, in English and French, in the categories of fiction, poetry, drama, nonfiction, children’s literature (text and illustration) and translation.
The awards will be presented today by Her Excellency the Right Honourable Adrienne Clarkson,
Governor General of Canada, and Jean-Louis Roux, Chairman of the Canada Council for the Arts, at a 4 p.m. ceremony at Rideau Hall.
Each laureate will receive a cheque for $15,000 and a specially-crafted copy of the winning book bound by master bookbinder Pierre Ouvrard. The Governor General will also present certificates to the publishers of the prize-winning books, and the Canada Council will provide each publisher with a $3,000 grant to support promotional activities.
“The recipients of this year’s Governor General’s Literary Awards give us an artistic prism through which we see our lives and spirits
refracted,” said the Governor General. “The different voices of these writers reflect the reality of human life and its varied dreams, beliefs, and desires.”
“The winning books remind us once again of the immense power of the written word to stimulate us, make us reflect on our condition, and give us cause for celebration in even the most difficult times,” said Canada Council Chairman Jean-Louis Roux. “Our writers are the guardians of the human spirit, and their achievements should be a source of inspiration and pride for all Canadians.”
Fiction Written in English
Richard B. Wright, St. Catharines, Ontario, for
Clara Callan
(HarperFlamingo Canada: A Phyllis Bruce Book)
English-language jury’s citation: “
Clara Callan
brilliantly transfers ordinary lives onto a wider canvas to portray the grandeur of an era. In a style that is understated yet compelling, Wright blends the forms of the letter and the journal to construct a powerful narrative.”