This section contains 923 words (approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: "Word Work," in Canadian Literature, No. 135, Winter, 1993, pp. 139-40.
Ricou is a Canadian writer and educator. In the following review, Ricou assesses The Wild Blue Yonder, concluding that Thomas's wordplay creates in her stories tension, irony, and at times unparalleled beauty.
Audrey Thomas's typical form emerges in [The Wild Blue Yonder] as the sketch engagé/dégagé. She finds an impetus, a core story, in recent history, usually violent—the Hungerford massacre, Tiananmen Square, a generic newspaper story of a young murderer who preys on older women. In reshaping this story, Thomas expresses her strong social commitment, but more so her interest in how these public events affect the individual psyche and distort, however subtly, the narrative of the soul. Interrupting, disfiguring, and generally providing an alternative is the story that language tells itself. The metalinguistic element is not invariable, as in Daphne Marlatt, and seldom affects...
This section contains 923 words (approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page) |