Everything's coming up Whittall
GAY FOR READING / A very good year for writer Zoe Whittall
Alice Lawlor / Toronto / Thursday, December 16, 2010
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It’s been quite a year for Zoe Whittall. In the spring, her critically acclaimed second novel — a vivid depiction of Toronto’s Queen West community entitled Holding Still for as Long as Possible — was published in paperback. Then it was nominated for a ReLit Award, an honour that recognizes the best new work from independent publishers.
And in the fall, Canada Reads came calling. After three weeks of public voting, Whittall’s Bottle Rocket Hearts made it into the top 10 of the popular CBC contest. She was “thrilled and shocked” when she found out, screaming “so loud the cats ran under the couch.”

Not everyone was so surprised.
Bottle Rocket Hearts is the kind of novel that has “queer CanLit classic” written all over it. It’s the story of Eve, a university student who discovers passion and politics in 1990s Montreal. It’s fast-paced, funny and serious, often at the same time. When it was published in 2007, NOW magazine named Whittall Best Emerging Writer and The Globe and Mail declared her “the cockiest, brashest, funniest, toughest, most life-affirming, elegant, scruffy, no-holds-barred writer to emerge from Canada since Mordecai Richler.”

High praise for a first-time novelist. Whittall, who grew up in Quebec and moved to Toronto in the 1990s, spent almost 10 years working on that novel.

“I was afraid of calling myself a writer for most of the time I spent writing it,” she says.

But giving up was never an option. 
Zoe Whittall.
(Jenna Wakani)

“It’s an incredibly challenging country in which to be a writer, and it is even more challenging for queer writers who actually write about queer people, given how frightened most publishers are of the changing and declining market,” she says. “Many refuse to take risks on what they consider to be a marginal viewpoint that readers won’t relate to.”

Happily, progressive publisher Cormorant Books was willing to take that risk. Three years later, Whittall is now at work on a script version of Bottle Rocket Hearts. And the Canada Reads nod is testament to its enduring popularity.

“I think there is a certain amount of ’90s nostalgia happening now and not a lot of queer books sets in contemporary Canada,” says Whittall. “I also think that coming-of-age novels frequently have a timeless appeal.”

The Canada Reads final five was announced on Nov 24, and although there’s a good representation of women on the list — Carol Shields, Ami McKay and Angie Abdou — and celesbian Sara Quin on the panel, Whittall was knocked out. She would have been a worthy winner, though. Whittall has always been a passionate advocate of CanLit — queer or otherwise.

“Instead of buying the big bestseller, like Twilight or Harry Potter, because Indigo will give you 40 percent off or whatever, get that from the library and buy a book by a Canadian author instead,” she says. “Buy small-press queer authors! It’s frustrating to go to readings and see people drop 50 bucks on drinks but they’re too cheap to spend 20 on a book. Nerd up, people. We’re dying here.”

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Reader Comments


 
An desk editor asleep at the switch OMG
This is the closest Xtra has come to allowing the westend to be properly identified - a vivid depiction of Toronto’s Queer West community. Usually a some beady eyed desk editor (Following Xtra's Stylebook)would change it to queer Parkdale or just the west end. Who slipped up, will he or she be fired?
michel, Toronto ON
12/16/10 9:59 AM EST
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[Editor's Note]
Ed's note
Actually Michel - this is awkward on a couple of levels - you've pointed out a typo in the text. It should read "Queen West," rather than "Queer West." I've corrected the text. Sorry about that.
Matt Mills, Toronto Ont
12/16/10 10:09 AM EST
You said it!
Good going, Zoe. Great to see you succeed. And your comment about consumption of mass culture at discount prices is right on. The analogy to local produce is clear: buy local and get a health and taste bonus. Maybe you'll pay a little more, but we've been undervaluing the local for years. (I've stretched it; that's why you're the writer and I'm not). Best, Nadine.
Nadine Oberman, Toronto ON
12/16/10 10:35 AM EST
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Don't forget...
...that Zoe Whittall's novel The Middle Ground came out in Spring 2010 too! It's one of the books in the new Rapid Reads series under the Raven Books imprint (Orca Book Publishers), and yet another accomplishment for Zoe this year. More info here: http://www.orcabook.com/productdetails.cfm?PC=742
Leslie Bootle, Victoria BC
12/16/10 11:58 AM EST
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Editors Note
Kudos for Zoe for referencing it in her blog - X event Hosted at Art Metropole in the queer west end at 788 King St. W. So young Matt, when's the next edition of Xtra Newspaper Stylebook coming out, think there might be changes?
michel, Toronto ON
12/16/10 4:46 PM EST
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[Editor's Note]
Ed's note
Hi Michel. We anticipate the completion of a new style guide for Xtra in 2011.
Matt Mills, Toronto Ont
12/17/10 3:47 PM EST