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A Map of Glass
 
 

A Map of Glass (Paperback)

by Jane Urquhart (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 14.94 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 39. Details
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Product Description

Amazon.ca

In the typical Urquhart mold, A Map of Glass is a novel about the past, the land, and art, subjects found in many of her previous novels. A young artist, Jerome, is alone on Timber Island to take photos of temporary art creations, or "absences," he has dug in the snow. While there, he finds the body of Andrew Woodman, an Alzheimer's sufferer, frozen in the ice of the river. Later, an older woman, Sylvia, searches out Jerome and his girlfriend in Toronto. Slightly autistic, she has fled her doctor husband in rural eastern Ontario because she wants to talk to Jerome about Andrew, her lover. The three sections of the book are intelligently constructed, with the two contemporary sections framing the central section, which recounts the history of the Woodman family, 19th-century shipbuilders and hotelkeepers on Lake Ontario.

Urquhart's writing is extremely resonant and always echoes her larger themes: "How wonderful the snow was; every change of direction, each whim, even the compulsion of hunger was marked on its surface, like memory, for a brief season." Her writing is also highly cerebral--little happens in this novel but there is an enormous quantity of thoughtful reflection. The depiction of the Woodman past, with its near-mythical characters and its grand hotel invaded by sand, is so deeply realized that the present feels amorphous in contrast, its characters infused with the ambiguity of modernism. In the end, however, Urquhart shows how this makes perfect sense for, with profound subtlety, she raises a startling question: In the face of shocking change--in landscapes, in memories that fade to nothing, even in the complete dissolution of the human personality in Alzheimer's--what can still be called reality? Urquhart is a subtle master at work. --Mark Frutkin --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.



Books in Canada

In Jane Urquhart's latest novel, A Map of Glass, there is a hotel which, over the course of a few decades, gradually becomes subsumed beneath layers of sand. The inhabitants see it happening but are at a loss to stop it. Like Yeats's rough beast slouching towards Bethlehem, the quicksands of time subject everything to their will, whatever one may do to fend them off. Such is the slow inexorability of destiny. Sweeping the sandpiles from the window ledges is futile; they accumulate everywhere. This episode is emblematic of the larger concerns of this novel: the inevitability of change, the fitfulness of destiny, and the erosion of historical memory.
Readers who have been awaiting Urquhart's latest book after the immense success of her three previous award-winning novels-The Stone Carvers, The Underpainter, and Away-will recognize the hallmarks of her work: dreamy but inspired women; heavily symbolic layering; a fascination with the 19th century; philosophical profundities about loss and longing; characters obsessed with geography; and a desire to conjure the past, even as that past eludes one's grasp. All of these elements are here. Yet there is something in the overall effort that doesn't quite come off.
The novel, divided into three sections, is framed by the character of Sylvia, who is mourning the death of her lover, Andrew Woodman, a historical geographer whose obsession with retrieving the past is set in ironic counterpoint to the gradual loss of his memory from Alzheimer's as the novel proceeds. Sylvia, who suffers from an unnamed psychic ailment (presumably a mild form of autism), reads about Andrew's death in the newspaper and sets out to speak with the man who discovered his corpse frozen in the ice off Timber Island. Andrew, it turns out, had been seeking a return to the past by journeying to the haunts of his timber-baron ancestors. This is where the plot takes an improbable turn. We are to believe that Sylvia, who has never left her house on her own, whose every action must be monitored by her overly solicitous doctor-husband, and who is inept at the most basic forms of social interaction, travels on her own to Toronto to meet with the equally distracted artist, Jerome, who found Andrew's body while taking photographs for his latest art installation. The fact that Jerome never knew Andrew and can tell Sylvia nothing doesn't stop her from planting herself on his doorstep and chatting about her obsessions. Jerome, who seems as uptight as she is, begins to welcome these intrusions, though why he endures them isn't clear. There are vague references to Jerome's troubled relationship with his father, but this is never developed enough for us to really care. Instead, we are to think there is some kind of mystical destiny at work, that Sylvia and Jerome were meant to meet so that . . . what? So that Jerome can be Sylvia's confessor while he himself benefits from the older woman's obscure form of savantism? The whole thing is unconvincing, and doesn't make for very compelling reading.
Urquhart's work slips a notch when she is writing about the present. Her female characters, when transposed to the present, come across as overly romanticized and slightly prim. Her men are chronically aloof: distant, taciturn, and suffering some inner torment. This is all requisite fare in Urquhart's earlier works, particularly in her first three historical novels-The Whirlpool, Away, and Changing Heaven. However, without the shrouding effect of the distant past, it all seems a bit forced. Perhaps it is the character of Sylvia that is the weak link here. Sylvia's "autism" functions as a convenient symbol for existence without history, for being caught in a perpetual present. As she tells her husband, "I never know . . . where we have been, where we are now." She figures herself as a "missing person", which clearly echoes the female characters in Urquhart's 1993 bestseller Away. Nevertheless, her observations come across as neurotic rather than profound. Because of her disability, she has a heightened awareness of change. One might say the same of the deceased Andrew, though his was a heightened awareness of the past, which included a sense of obligation towards it. On the one hand, Andrew was plagued by what he termed an "inherited memory of destruction" since his ancestors participated in the destruction of the Ontario wilderness. On the other, he felt guilty because so many of these settler ancestors had been forgotten. Their legacy, as he put it, is a "biography of stones". In a sense, Sylvia and Andrew switch places: he becomes locked in a present that allows no sense of sequence; she becomes obsessed with "sequentiality", how the past affects the present. "Perhaps," she tells Jerome, "all of life is an exercise in forgetting."
The book aims to explore the interconnections between past and present, and so its form is important to its theme. One problem is that the historical section of the novel is far more compelling than the ponderous exchanges between Sylvia and Jerome in his pseudo-bohemian Toronto studio. The novel finally comes alive a third of the way through when we read the history of Andrew's ancestors as they have been recorded in Andrew's voluminous notebooks, which Sylvia gives Jerome to read. In effect, we are allowed to eavesdrop on the ghosts of Canada's settler past, watching them stalk the landscape and lay their claim to it. The history of Timber Island, based on the real-life Garden Island in Kingston Harbour, tells of the competing lumber barons and the men who worked on the immense rafts that were transported downriver to Quebec City. Here we learn the tale of Branwell Woodman, Andrew's great-grandfather, whose affair with the vivacious servant girl from Orphan Island, Marie, set in action a chain of events that was to shape the family's destiny. Whether predestined or not is a question left to the reader to ponder, but a series of circumstances contribute to the family's loss of fortune. In effect, this was inevitable since the golden age of lumbering had to come to an end with the advent of steamships and railway lines. Such is the whimsy, as Charles G.D. Roberts put it, of "the hands of chance and change."
Branwell Woodman, like his 19th-century namesake Branwell Brontd, is a mediocre painter whose education takes precedence over that of his more talented sister, Annabelle. He travels to Europe only to return home a disappointment to the family patriarch, until Annabelle takes Branwell's fate in hand and not only reunites him with Marie but also sets in motion his artistic career as a muralist. Marie, in turn, enters the family as a kind of Heathcliff, whose origins are uncertain (albeit French Canadian), and who has an edge of ferocity that draws Branwell into her bed. The father's antipathy to everything Irish and Catholic is mitigated by his love for his grandson, the "Badger", who eventually undermines his grandfather's legacy by marrying the daughter of Woodman Senior's arch-rival. All of this makes for compelling reading, and I have to admit that I happily forgot Jerome's and Sylvia's private angsts. It is true that we are supposed to be reading Andrew Woodman's notebooks in these sections, which is somewhat problematic as there are certain elements here that a later descendant would not be privy to, such as the thoughts and feelings of Annabelle as she puts together her "Splinter Book" of memorabilia, or Annabelle and Maria's whispered itemisations of Branwell's faults. Nevertheless, these stylistic lapses might be explained by the revelation in the novel's final framing chapters, which raises a question about the nature of the notebooks. I don't want to give too much away. Suffice it to say that the novel concludes in a Life of Pi manner, in which everything we have been led to believe respecting the events we have been reading about (and not only in the notebook sections) is called into question.
Toward the end of the novel, it is revealed that Andrew suffered from Alzheimer's and gradually stopped recognizing Sylvia. This turned her into a kind of ghost. Alzheimer's becomes a symbol for the intergenerational forgetting of the past, the inevitability of historical amnesia. While Urquhart seeks to waylay the effects of such forgetting in her novels, or at least to meditate on the psychic trauma that the futility of the endeavour brings about, the real challenge is the Pascalian leap of faith required to honour one's ancestors in the full recognition that "the dead don't answer when we call them." Urquhart's works bespeak a longing for teleology, a desire to find meaning in the happenstance of destiny. I admire her commitment to this poeticising of Ontario's settler history and the conjuring act it entails. I would ask, however, for fewer ethereal maidens along the way.
Cynthia Sugars (Books in Canada)
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Urquhart explores the psyches and sensibilities of people, Feb 27 2006
By A Customer
This review is from: A Map of Glass (Hardcover)
As she did in her earlier books, The Stone Carvers, and The Underpainter, Urquhart explores the psyches and sensibilities of people committed to unconventional forms of art. In this case, they are aging landscape geographer Andrew Woodman; a young "earth artist" who attempts to capture in photographs Ontario's vanishing past; and bereaved protagonist Sylvia Bradley, victim of a debilitating borderline autistic "condition," whose fear of imprecision and chaos takes the form of an obsession with maps.

A splendid opening scene depicts Andrew en route to remote Timber Island, deep in the throes of Alzheimer's, lurching toward his death. Thereafter, his married lover Sylvia travels to meet with McNaughton and the process of unearthing the past and its secrets begins. The subjects explored are Jerome's search for permanence through art, in his failed love life and in a world he perceives vulnerable to continual change and decay; Sylvia's insular childhood, comfortable marriage to an older man whom she doesn't love and "awakening" in her relationship with Andrew; and-in the novel's best sequence-the story of the Woodman family.

They're a cut above Faulkner's Snopeses: a clan of avaricious power-seekers, from whom Andrew had spent his life attempting escape. This is a load for any novelist to handle, and Urquhart achieves only mixed success. She's a wonderful scene-painter with an impressive masteryof the details of farm and village life. But her story flies in too many directions, and is hamstrung by appallingly portentous, theme-driven dialogue. At her best, this writer commands an impressive range of varied literary skills. But here, simpler would have been better.
I also recommend'The Quest' by George Kostantinos.

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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent book with knock-out characterizations, Sep 12 2005
By A Customer
This review is from: A Map of Glass (Hardcover)
A Map of Glass is a wonderful book, filled with extraordinary characterizations. In a way it is the antithesis to The Stone Carvers. Where The Stone Carvers dealt with changing the immutable, A Map of Glass is about the need to confront that which is ever-changing and ultimately ephemeral. I highly recommend it.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "... there was always a mark left on a landscape by anyone who entered it..., April 24 2009
By Friederike Knabe (Ottawa, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: A Map of Glass (Paperback)
... even if it is just a trace - all but invisible - it is there for those willing to look hard enough." Like her protagonists, Jane Urquhart delights in following those traces in a landscape. Southern Ontario, an important backdrop in her previous, exquisite novel, The Stone Carvers, is explored here primarily as an essential part of a family history. Going back some hundred years, "Timber Island" is the intricate setting for this profound and brilliantly developed multi-faceted novel that explores a lot more, of course, than the interdependence between human beings and their land.

The central figure providing the glue, so to say, for the story's different threads is Sylvia, middle-aged and apparently suffering from a "condition" that, while not defined, suggests some form of autism. Since childhood she has been more comfortable with objects rather than people, preferring to touch their permanent and solid surfaces. The unpredictability and change that human beings represent made her withdraw, until... Nevertheless, she has married her doctor who had moved into the family home, taking over her father's surgery and the gentle and considerate treatment of the "patient". Under his guidance, Sylvia slowly learns to move cautiously beyond her familiar territory into the wider neighbourhood, concentrating on establishing clear landmarks for herself. During one of these outings, she meets Andrew, a landscape and historical geographer, a man "who walked into the past", who has been researching his family history. A secret friendship ensues that lasts on and off for many years, until he disappears from her life.

The novel opens with Andrew, suffering from Alzheimer's, attempting to return to the island where his forbears had created their timber business. This is one of the most delicate and evocatively beautiful passages in the book. "...The palms of his gloved hands are open to the sky as if he were silently requesting that the world come back to him, that the broken connections of heart and mind be mended, that language and the knowledge of a cherished place re-enter his consciousness..." While there are many other sections of moving lyricism and rich imagery, making reading Urquhart's prose such a delight, this first passage draws the reader right into the mysterious connections between Andrew, Sylvia and a young, "conceptual artist", Jerome. Jerome had found Andrew's body, frozen in ice during a visit to the now abandoned island. In his art he attempts to capture civilization debris, remnants of earlier human habitation. To some extent Jerome symbolizes Urquhart's own exploration of Robert Smithson's aesthetics. The novel's title is derived from Smithson's sculpture "Map of Broken Glass"; Smithson's contention that "the artist seeks.... the fiction that reality will sooner or later imitate" can be interpreted as one of the novel's underlying motives.

Sylvia, having learned of Andrew's death, seeks out Jerome, who she feels is holding "the end of Andrew's story... in a way, the last thing he told me". For the same reason, Sylvia feels compelled to share her life story, reluctantly at first, with this young stranger and finds an increasingly attentive listener. Jerome has his own demons to battle and, maybe, they can both help each other at some point.

Embedded in the present-day narrative, Andrew's journals form the middle section of the novel. They stand on their own and delve into the fascinating saga of his great-great grandfather, one of the early timber barons in Southern Ontario, and three generations of his offspring. Urquhart brings out Andrew's distinct voice: his description of the family's changing fortunes and long-term destiny is completely captivating. Their reign over the island leaves the land dramatically altered with consequences far beyond the landscape: symbolic for the impact of destroying its natural beauty and for the family's greed is the image of their fancy hotel, now almost totally submerged in sand. As a counterbalance to those driven solely by profit, there are those with more redeeming features, such as family values and, in particular, artistic talent and expression.

Art and artists always play an important role in Urquhart's novels. Sylvia is an artist of sorts: she creates tactile maps for her blind friend Julia. Maps are important to her as they establish some form of solidity and permanency. Her own maps reflect her very personal sense of landscapes, shapes and markers that she shares with her friend. Julia asked her once, how she could be sure that what she sees is what other people see. Maybe a more profound question than intended, it turns out as we, the readers, are encouraged to follow the fluid lines between her imagination and reality. Sylvia's version of her life's story, of her relationship with Andrew, with her husband, may not match the one the reader is being led to believe. Or is it? And, as Jerome muses: "maybe landscape -- place -- makes people more knowable. Or it did, in the past". This is a novel to absorb slowly, to ponder and to be carried away into different mental and real landscapes, rich in symbolism and breathtakingly beautiful at times. [Friederike Knabe]
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