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Something Remains
 
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Something Remains [Paperback]

Hassan Ghedi Santur

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 328 pages
  • Publisher: Dundurn (Jan 14 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1554884659
  • ISBN-13: 978-1554884650
  • Product Dimensions: 21.3 x 13.7 x 2 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 381 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #700,158 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Quill & Quire

One-time war photographer Andrew Christensen, the main character in this debut novel, now takes portraits of willing customers who enter the cab he drives around Toronto. Andrew’s mother, Ella, has just died of cancer, and his father, Gregory, cracking under the stress, uncharacteristically assaults a stranger in a bowling alley. Andrew’s marriage – the result of an unplanned pregnancy – is also facing difficulties. On the day of his mother’s viewing, Andrew’s old flame, an actress named Sarah Turlington, unexpectedly shows up. Their passion is instantly rekindled, and the two fall into bed, despite the fact they are both married.

The novel’s other thread follows Andrew’s best friend Zakhariye, a Somalian immigrant who is the managing editor of a literary magazine. Zakhariye’s problems are not unlike Andrew’s: less than a year ago, a car accident killed his young son and severely injured his wife. The aftermath has put stress on their relationship and caused Zakhariye to question the job he has worked at for seven years.

Santur’s writing employs frequent, careless repetition of nouns and phrases, while jerky, impulsive characters are prone to sudden, histrionic outbursts of all-caps swearing. Bothersome details abound. Ella, Sarah’s acting coach for five years, was her “magnificent teacher, supporter and encourager.” Sarah has intended to call her mentor all week, yet her rather unusual name – Ella Kotsopoulos Christensen – does not register when Sarah reads it in the obituaries. Gregory meets with a salesman in the “home renovation section” of Home Depot and “decides to start on the garden” in December.        

These seemingly trivial things add up to one big mess: Santur is throwing a pot of undercooked spaghetti against a wall in the hope that a single strand will stick. He cannot expect his readers to care when he appears to care so little himself.

Review

"Santur attempts to preserve our city's almost tribal vitality by telling the multiple stories of people intersecting within it, which is to say by using character as the literary form of neighbourhood."

(Toronto Star, The )

"It amazes me how the author, Hassan Ghedi Santur, can see into the souls of such a diverse group of characters; a photojournalist, his father, an actress, a Somali-born editor and the range of other people who effect and interconnect with their lives, and bring them vividly alive in my imagination. The profound insight he brings to his characters as they navigate through the streets of Toronto in search of something to fill the void, as they find that spark of hope that helps them to go on after their worlds have been destroyed by loss. A remarkable journey into the sorrow that life brings to find that something does remains after all. Something Remains struck me to my very core…. So beautifully told." -- Denyse Karn, Associate Artistic Producer, Nightwood Theatre & Co-Artistic Producer, In Good Company Theatre

(Nightwood Theatre )

“Something Remains was a pleasure to read. Hassan Ghedi Santur writes with intelligence and sympathy about a wide range of subjects: grief, love, sex, the endless complexities involved in human relationships. As the narrative weaves throughout the lives of an actress, an editor, a cabdriver, multicultural Toronto is brought to life with a global and extremely contemporary perspective. This is an ambitious, wise and, at times, very funny book by a young novelist definitely worth keeping an eye on.” -- Jules Lewis, author of Waiting for Ricky Tantrum (Dundurn Press, 2010)

(Jules Lewis )

"There is irresistible heart in this novel, an ambitious determination to encompass the complexity of the world in the lives of a handful of ordinarily flawed and striving people."

(Globe & Mail, The )

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