"No one can be lonely who has a book for company." ~ Nelle Reagan

Showing posts with label Will Ferguson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Will Ferguson. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Review: 419 by Will Ferguson

419
Author:  Will Ferguson
Published:  2012
Publisher:  Viking (an imprint of Penguin Canada)
Format:  hardcover
Pages:  399 including acknowledgments and notes
Source:  borrowed (but I am going to buy a copy so I can read it again.  It's that good!)

http://shirley-mybookshelf.blogspot.ca/2013/06/the-two-red-chairs-evening-with-author.html

http://shirley-mybookshelf.blogspot.ca/2013/06/scotiabank-giller-prize-winning-author.html


Summary:  "From internationally bestselling travel writer Will Ferguson, author of Happiness™ and Spanish Fly, comes a novel both epic in its sweep and intimate in its portrayal of human endurance.


A car tumbles through darkness down a snowy ravine.



A woman without a name walks out of a dust storm in sub-Saharan Africa.

And in the seething heat of Lagos City, a criminal cartel scours the Internet, looking for victims.

Lives intersect. Worlds collide. And it all begins with a single email: “Dear Sir, I am the daughter of a Nigerian diplomat, and I need your help…

Will Ferguson takes readers deep into the labyrinth of lies that is “419,” the world’s most insidious Internet scam.

When Laura Curtis, a lonely editor in a cold northern city, discovers that her father has died because of one such swindle, she sets out to track down—and corner—her father’s killer. It is a dangerous game she’s playing, however, and the stakes are higher than she can ever imagine.

Woven into Laura’s journey is a mysterious woman from the African Sahel with scars etched into her skin and a young man who finds himself caught up in a web of violence and deceit.


And running through it, a dying father’s final words: “You, I love.” (Amazon.ca) 




My thoughts:

From a writer best known for his travel literature and/or humour, Will Ferguson has entered his third foray into literary fiction with his most recent work, 419.  How does a writer known for other genres branch out to fiction?  According to his interview at the Arden Theatre, he uses a bit of humour [a love of travel, an inquisitive mind] and a bit of parental experience and the gap is bridged.  As he stated in an interview with MacLean, "I try to alternate between fiction and non-fiction. I think it uses different parts of your brain."


When I'd heard Will Ferguson had won the Scotiabank Giller Prize for his novel 419, I had to learn more about the book but it took me a year to finally make time to read it.  I picked up a copy after meeting Ferguson at the Arden Theatre in St. Albert in June.  I wish I'd done so sooner.

419 opens with a car crash which may or may not have been a suicide and the ensuing police investigation wherein we meet the family of the deceased, particularly a daughter who is intent on revenge.    419 then "travels" to Nigeria where a nameless pregnant woman leaves her tribe and walks alone across deserts, through villages, before she meets up with a man who will take her to the deeper south.  

The story of the oil industry in Africa is a caustic bi-line that introduces a new character, the man who befriends the nameless woman.  A significant portion of the novel follows Nnamdi, a "mechanic" and secondary driver of a tanker hauling stolen oil.  His story allows you to see a different Africa.  If you thought the oil industry here was bad, take a read at just how horrible it could be in the hands of Ferguson as he portrays a time when the Niger Delta was in an uproar over the oil. 

We also meet Wilson, a 419 scam artist who preys upon people using the internet as a fraudulent means of getting money from unsuspecting individuals.  At first Wilson is on his own but when he has some success and is about to score big, a mafia boss has him brought in to force him to work for him.  

As the stories converge, they each play a role, knowingly and unknowingly in each other's lives and in the outcome of the book.

What some might call disjointed, I found as an interesting sideline as Ferguson brought together four main characters, passing between their stories, and in the end merging them together to a climax that both made me angry and glad.  You have to read it to discover why.  No spoilers here.

419 is a book that is difficult to put down, shocking, eye-opening and could very well be non-fiction if it weren't fiction.  For me it was phenomenal and I would highly recommend it!

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The following was written of the winning book, 419, by the jury for the Scotiabank Giller Award: 

"Will Ferguson's 419 points in the direction of something entirely new: the Global Novel. It is a novel emotionally and physically at home in the poverty of Lagos and in the day-to-day of North America. It tells us the ways in which we are now bound together and reminds us of the things that will always keep us apart. It brings us the news of the world far beyond the sad, hungry faces we see on CNN and CBC and far beyond the spreadsheets of our pension plans. Ferguson is a true travel writer, his eye attuned to the last horrible detail. He is also a master at dialogue and suspense. It is tempting to put 419 in some easy genre category, but that would only serve to deny its accomplishment and its genius."


Meet the author:
photo taken by myself at the Arden Theatre
in St. Albert June 14, 2013
Will Ferguson is a travel writer and novelist  and has authored several award-winning memoirs, including Beyond BelfastHitching Rides with Buddha, and the humorous anecdotal collection Canadian Pie. His novels include Spanish Fly, Happiness™, and 419. Will has been nominated for both an IMPAC Dublin Award and a Commonwealth Writers Prize and is a three-time winner of the Leacock Medal.  Published in more than 20 languages around the world, one might say even his written works are well traveled.  He won the Scotiabank Giller Prize for best fiction (419) by a Canadian author in 2012.





Saturday, June 15, 2013

The Two Red Chairs - an evening with author Will Ferguson


Will Ferguson, author of Spanish Fly, Canadian Pie, Happiness, Beyond Belfast, Hitching Rides With Buddha, Beauty Tips From Moose Jaw, Coal Dust Kisses: a Christmas Memoir, Why I Hate Canadians (he's a Canadian author), How to Be Canadian (with Ian Ferguson), Canadian Pie, and most recently the Scotiabank Giller Prize winner 419.





Last evening a friend and I drove out to St. Albert to the Arden Theatre for the opportunity to take part in a presentation featuring award winning author Will Ferguson.  Accompanying him in the other red chair, as interviewer, was Paula Simons, journalist for the Edmonton Journal.

Paula had read Will Ferguson's 419 twice, while neither my friend nor I had yet read it.  Following a brief interview, Will Ferguson read from one of his books, Canadian Pie, I think; and then 419, following which he welcomed questions from the audience.

 
Predominately, the evening conversation focused on 419 but a noted commonality was identified between the writing of a fiction novel, 419, and his books of the humour genre.  Each book, 419 and Canadian Pie, have a common thread of parenting.  In 419 he asks, "If it gives the child a better life, would they? Would they die for their child?”

The other book from which Ferguson read shares a conversation he had with his son while reading the Hardy Boys together at bedtime.  Interestingly, the worst characters in the Hardy Boys series seem to be smugglers or something of similar sort and his son picked up on that after the first few books.  Today's society is far different, I think.  

At any rate, as Ferguson ties the concept of parenting as a common thread, not always so obvious in his books, so does he use humour.  Of course his books like Canadian Pie and Why I Hate Canadians are strictly humorous, 419 does have the odd humour thrown in lest the story become too dark.  (paraphrased from the author)


So, yes, an author can cross different genres and do it well. Ferguson is an example of this success.  As he was introduced at the top of the evening as being three separate authors, well in a way he is.  As he wrote in my copy of Hitching Rides With Buddha, he is also known as William (the intellectual author), Billy (the humour writer) and Will (the travel author).  All three in one....and he does it well.

Should you have the opportunity to see him in person, I hope you will.  He is as gifted on the stage, sharing humorous anecdotes, his research (how did that car come to be where it was), and offering advice (outline, outline, outline and write 10 minutes every day).  Oh, and there's the question about a Pontiac Oldsmobile......he cleared that up for us but perhaps he will generously share this with you too!


It was a longer than expected evening with complimentary refreshments and a book signing to follow. We left around 10 pm.  He must have been exhausted but he courteously allowed everyone the opportunity to get their book signed and to speak with him briefly.  After all, he drove all the way from Calgary that very day and, as he put it, his butt was tired.




 http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/books/2012/10/31/will_ferguson_takes_giller_prize_for_novel_419.html


 http://www.willferguson.ca/news.html



Ferguson wore a kilt to the award ceremony and toasted the written word at the close of his acceptance speech.  You may watch a portion of it on YouTube.  Funnily, if one of the judges had known he was going to show up in a kilt, Ferguson said, he would not have won his vote.  I wonder why not? (tongue in cheek)


Saturday, June 8, 2013

Scotiabank Giller Prize Winning Author, Will Ferguson, to Appear in St. Albert!



The author of 419, the Scotiabank Giller Prize winning novel; travelogue; and humour will be in St. Albert next Friday evening. I would love to attend!



Preview

Will Ferguson
Friday, June 14
7:30 to 9:00 p.m.
Arden Theatre

Tickets are $10 (includes refreshments)
Call the library at 780-459-1530 or visit the customer service desk.
What promises to be interesting is Will Ferguson's attempt to tie in humour with travel and fiction. “I’m going to make the case that the humorist and the literary novelist are not that far apart. Hopefully, people will see a parallel between the two,” he said.

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