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The Summer Between
 
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The Summer Between [Paperback]

Andrew Binks
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Review

There are no lapses worth mentioning in this deftly structured and perfectly inflected story... We watch him revel in love's beginning and absorb the knowledge of its inevitable change. What a wonderful fictional debut.
-Jim Bartley, Xtra

Lost in the torrent of fat, glitzy-covered commercial books that flood your favourite bookstore are quiet, charming novels like this one from Ontario's Andrew Binks. It's so tautly written and so direct in its narration, it makes the average bestseller seem flabby. ... The Summer Between succeeds as a low-key account of a boy testing his instincts and his upbringing in a natural but ever-more-complicated world.
-Dave Williamson, Prairie Fire

The Summer Between is a poignant and introspective novel that is at times both funny and heartbreaking and that seamlessly fuses universal themes of a boy's experiences as he embarks upon adolescence with the growing realisation that he is different against the backdrop of the local colour of rural eastern Ontario in the late 1960s. In this respect, Mr. Binks offers the reader an incredibly thoughtful, thought-provoking and bittersweet story of a boy coming of age and at the same time a distinct slice of period Canadiana. By all accounts The Summer Between is an exceptionally written novel that should not to be missed.
-Indigene, Three Dollar Bill Reviews

Product Description

Like his attempts to swim over the dark water of the river that lies between him and the object of his affections, twelve-year-old Dougaldo Montmigny struggles against oppression, homophobia and racism to realise his love for Tomahawk Clark, a thirteen-year-old Metis boy, during a summer destined to become a painful lesson on love and desire.

Like sailors becalmed on idyllic ships, this story is a subtle revelation of the emotional turmoil that lies beneath a bewitchingly deceptive picture of perfection. The Summer Between is a metaphor for the struggles and rewards of living where origins, tempests and landscape inform our collective soul.

In the spirit of Roddy Doyle's Paddy Clark Ha Ha Ha and Edmund White's A Boy's Own Story, readers will be moved by the touching circumstances of this innocent narrative.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Summer Between by Andrew Binks, Mar 22 2010
By 
Indigene (Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: The Summer Between (Paperback)
In his first novel, The Summer Between, author Andrew Binks has written a beautiful and moving story of a boy poised on the cusp of adolescence. Set in an eastern Ontario rural community north of Ottawa on the shores of the Ottawa River during the late 1960s, the story is told through the eyes of twelve-year old Dougaldo (Douglas) Montmigny who is of Anglo and French descent and lives with his family year-round in the cottage community of Baird's Landing.

Dougaldo inhabits a narrow world that is at times stiflingly oppressive. The period in which this story takes place is a time of great social and political evolution for Canada, a young country coming into its own. However, like many rural communities Baird's Landing selfishly holds on to its insularity in an attempt to keep the changing outside world at bay. A disdain of differences, racism, homophobia and religious fervour are endemic among many of its residents, both young and old, and what Dougaldo witnesses and experiences is often confusing, hurtful and alienating.

For centuries a life source for the Algonquin nation and later for European settlers and a natural border between English and French Canada, in many respects the river serves as an emotional lifeline for Dougaldo, who seeks escape from a difficult family life by focusing on the more boyish pursuits of swimming and fishing. Most of all, Dougaldo anxiously awaits the coming of summer and with it the arrival to the Landing of his friend Tomahawk (Tom) Clark, a Métis boy of Ojibway and Anglo ancestry.

"Most of the year I don't want to know the months not going by. I don't see the reason
for winter and all the waiting for the snow and ice to melt. So I draw pictures of the
beach and boats. And us. The pictures are never any good. I fold them away where no
one can find them. Even so, it all makes it take longer."

"Something about it, about the heat and the butterflies and the tickles. Summer is still too
far away and all I can do is sit still in the classroom - cold white walls, hard floor, buzzing
white light - staring out the window. I can see the mountains on the other side of the river
and can even see the river because the dead trees got no leaves to hide it. Not till spring.
Snow swirls where the bus will be to take us home. Try not to dream about summer."

In The Summer Between Mr. Binks pays tribute to the land and peoples of this region through his superbly crafted narrative that captures the beauty and majesty of the land and the essence of the history, collision and mixing of cultures and languages. Most striking is the author's writing of the narrative voice of Dougaldo and more broadly the dialogue throughout the book, which authentically captures the unique manner of the vernacular language and idiomatic expression of the characters owing to the reciprocal influences of the English and French languages.

All of this serves as a rich backdrop to Dougaldo's story and the world as seen and told through his eyes. Dougaldo's quest throughout the book is to become close with Tom and to "make blood brothers with him." His internal voice tells him that he is different from other boys and with a growing sense that the nature of his feelings for Tom may be of more than friendship.

"I close my eyes and see us on the couch. My head is on Tom's lap. I never did that, but in
my mind he pats my head like Mom used to. I walk a few more circles. My hands are cold
now and the moon's gone behind the clouds. I rewalk my path and look back every few
steps. Something Margaret said makes my heart thump. I walk faster, too. If Thierry made
a blood brother with the Injun, maybe Tom and I could do that."

Mr. Binks has written Dougaldo in such a way that his purity of spirit and honesty shine through rendering this character's narrative voice one that is most precious and the character himself unforgettable. It is a voice that is both untouched and innocent and at the same time hauntingly perceptive and wise. Dougaldo tries to make sense of all going on around him, of his parents' turbulent marriage, of the tensions between English and French, and of the prejudice against Indians, all the while trying to reconcile his feelings of love and desire for Tom and the growing knowledge that what he feels is looked upon as being wrong.

"I hear Tom call behind me and blow bubbles in the tune of that song about strangers in the
night. I laugh but then he's close by and then I feel his hand on my leg, which is so good to
know his touch. But the tickle goes right up my leg to where I know it's wrong without him
even touching it. The kids at camp called me a fairy. They didn't have to say fairies were bad.
You could tell in the way they said it. And I can't breathe. I shake my foot free and head for shore.
I don't know if a person your own age touches you is that bad? I don't want people calling me a
fairy-homo-queer like they know something I don't."

In addition to the exceptional characterisation of Dougaldo, the secondary characters in this story come alive through Dougaldo's rich perspective and the dialogue throughout the novel providing a genuine portrayal of the people of this community. While Mr. Binks excels in the characterisation of both recurring and occasional secondary characters, it his portrayal of Tomahawk that stands out most. Tomahawk is aloof and somewhat enigmatic, and with the exception of the time that he spends with Dougaldo, he seldom participates in community life. While the mystery of Tom serves to heighten Dougaldo's quest to become ever closer to him, the sense that he is separate and disconnected from the community deftly captures the marginalisation that Tomahawk, as part First Nation, would have likely endured in this place and during this time.

The Summer Between is a poignant and introspective novel that is at times both funny and heartbreaking and that seamlessly fuses universal themes of a boy's experiences as he embarks upon adolescence with the growing realisation that he is different against the backdrop of the local colour of rural eastern Ontario in the late 1960s. In this respect, Mr. Binks offers the reader an incredibly thoughtful, thought-provoking and bittersweet story of a boy coming of age and at the same time a distinct slice of period Canadiana.

By all accounts The Summer Between is an exceptionally written novel that should not to be missed.
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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Summer Between by Andrew Binks, Mar 22 2010
By Indigene - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Summer Between (Paperback)
In his first novel, The Summer Between, author Andrew Binks has written a beautiful and moving story of a boy poised on the cusp of adolescence. Set in an eastern Ontario rural community north of Ottawa on the shores of the Ottawa River during the late 1960s, the story is told through the eyes of twelve-year old Dougaldo (Douglas) Montmigny who is of Anglo and French descent and lives with his family year-round in the cottage community of Baird's Landing.

Dougaldo inhabits a narrow world that is at times stiflingly oppressive. The period in which this story takes place is a time of great social and political evolution for Canada, a young country coming into its own. However, like many rural communities Baird's Landing selfishly holds on to its insularity in an attempt to keep the changing outside world at bay. A disdain of differences, racism, homophobia and religious fervour are endemic among many of its residents, both young and old, and what Dougaldo witnesses and experiences is often confusing, hurtful and alienating.

For centuries a life source for the Algonquin nation and later for European settlers and a natural border between English and French Canada, in many respects the river serves as an emotional lifeline for Dougaldo, who seeks escape from a difficult family life by focusing on the more boyish pursuits of swimming and fishing. Most of all, Dougaldo anxiously awaits the coming of summer and with it the arrival to the Landing of his friend Tomahawk (Tom) Clark, a Métis boy of Ojibway and Anglo ancestry.

"Most of the year I don't want to know the months not going by.
I don't see the reason for winter and all the waiting for the snow
and ice to melt. So I draw pictures of the beach and boats. And us.
The pictures are never any good. I fold them away where no one
can find them. Even so, it all makes it take longer."

"Something about it, about the heat and the butterflies and the tickles.
Summer is still too far away and all I can do is sit still in the classroom -
cold white walls, hard floor, buzzing white light - staring out the window.
I can see the mountains on the other side of the river and can even see
the river because the dead trees got no leaves to hide it. Not till spring.
Snow swirls where the bus will be to take us home. Try not to dream
about summer."

In The Summer Between Mr. Binks pays tribute to the land and peoples of this region through his superbly crafted narrative that captures the beauty and majesty of the land and the essence of the history, collision and mixing of cultures and languages. Most striking is the author's writing of the narrative voice of Dougaldo and more broadly the dialogue throughout the book, which authentically captures the unique manner of the vernacular language and idiomatic expression of the characters owing to the reciprocal influences of the English and French languages.

All of this serves as a rich backdrop to Dougaldo's story and the world as seen and told through his eyes. Dougaldo's quest throughout the book is to become close with Tom and to "make blood brothers with him." His internal voice tells him that he is different from other boys and with a growing sense that the nature of his feelings for Tom may be of more than friendship.

"I close my eyes and see us on the couch. My head is on Tom's lap.
I never did that, but in my mind he pats my head like Mom used to.
I walk a few more circles. My hands are cold now and the moon's
gone behind the clouds. I rewalk my path and look back every few
steps. Something Margaret said makes my heart thump. I walk faster,
too. If Thierry made a blood brother with the Injun, maybe Tom and I
could do that."

Mr. Binks has written Dougaldo in such a way that his purity of spirit and honesty shine through rendering this character's narrative voice one that is most precious and the character himself unforgettable. It is a voice that is both untouched and innocent and at the same time hauntingly perceptive and wise. Dougaldo tries to make sense of all going on around him, of his parents' turbulent marriage, of the tensions between English and French, and of the prejudice against Indians, all the while trying to reconcile his feelings of love and desire for Tom and the growing knowledge that what he feels is looked upon as being wrong.

"I hear Tom call behind me and blow bubbles in the tune of that song
about strangers in the night. I laugh but then he's close by and then I
feel his hand on my leg, which is so good to know his touch. But the
tickle goes right up my leg to where I know it's wrong without him even
touching it. The kids at camp called me a fairy. They didn't have to say
fairies were bad. You could tell in the way they said it. And I can't breathe.
I shake my foot free and head for shore. I don't know if a person your
own age touches you is that bad? I don't want people calling me a
fairy-homo-queer like they know something I don't."

In addition to the exceptional characterisation of Dougaldo, the secondary characters in this story come alive through Dougaldo's rich perspective and the dialogue throughout the novel providing a genuine portrayal of the people of this community. While Mr. Binks excels in the characterisation of both recurring and occasional secondary characters, it his portrayal of Tomahawk that stands out most. Tomahawk is aloof and somewhat enigmatic, and with the exception of the time that he spends with Dougaldo, he seldom participates in community life. While the mystery of Tom serves to heighten Dougaldo's quest to become ever closer to him, the sense that he is separate and disconnected from the community deftly captures the marginalisation that Tomahawk, as part First Nation, would have likely endured in this place and during this time.

The Summer Between is a poignant and introspective novel that is at times both funny and heartbreaking and that seamlessly fuses universal themes of a boy's experiences as he embarks upon adolescence with the growing realisation that he is different against the backdrop of the local colour of rural eastern Ontario in the late 1960s. In this respect, Mr. Binks offers the reader an incredibly thoughtful, thought-provoking and bittersweet story of a boy coming of age and at the same time a distinct slice of period Canadiana.

By all accounts The Summer Between is an exceptionally written novel that should not to be missed.
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