Courtesy Ian Willams
Nov. 7, 2019
Former writer-in-residence Ian Williams wins prestigious Giller Prize
Author Ian Williams is only half joking when he equates his time spent as the 2014-2015 Canadian writer-in-residence for the Calgary Distinguished Writers Program () with a detective movie.聽
He vividly recalls the sticky notes, storyboards and complex plot maps taped to the walls of his office in the 六九色堂鈥檚 Social Science building, the narrative blocks ever shifting. 鈥淚 would tape up plans and models on the wall and map out the structural stuff,鈥 Williams says in an interview from his Vancouver home. 鈥淚t was like those detective movies you see where they鈥檙e trying to puzzle out who鈥檚 the killer. I was completely immersed in this process for a long while.鈥澛
It was during his residency that Williams developed much of the epic plot and ambitious structure of his first novel,聽Reproduction, for which he won the prestigious Giller Prize, one of Canada鈥檚 top literary honours, on Nov. 18.聽
鈥淭hat was the critical phase of the book,鈥 says Williams. 鈥淚 started it before I came to Calgary, but I was working a high-demand job and I didn鈥檛 have the time to properly develop it. The CDWP residency gave me the full year I needed to work through the difficult parts of the book.鈥澛
To be sure,聽Reproduction聽is聽a novel in need of such meticulous planning. A sprawling, epic and experimental work, it鈥檚 the story of a family which cuts across generations, touching on the immigrant experience, date rape, teen pregnancy, love, disease, and issues of culture, race and gender.
Fascinatingly, as per the title,聽Reproduction聽is a book in which the narrative literally reproduces itself on the written page.聽
Written in four sections, part one begins with two characters, Felicia and Edgar, who meet in a Toronto hospital room shared by their ailing mothers. The two eventually fall in love over the course of 23 paired chapters 鈥 told from his and her聽points of view 鈥 which make up the first section. These chapters represent the 23 paired chromosomes found in almost every human cell, and they lead to the birth of Felicia and Edgar鈥檚 baby by the section鈥檚 end.聽
Section two spotlights four characters over the course of 16 chapters, and section three is composed of 256 small sections. 鈥淭he story is essentially multiplying,鈥 Williams explains. 鈥淔rom two to four to 16 to 16 squared, which is 256. We move from biology in section one, to multiplication in section two, to this exponential growth聽in part three, with all of these babies born at the end of each section. Then, at the end of part three, I sweep away the mathematics and I broach the final form of reproduction.鈥澛
Here, the novel takes a dark, difficult turn. 鈥淚n part four, the book itself gets cancer and a series of literary tumours spread from within the text 鈥 these growths which appear as a sort of subscript throughout the final section. If you cut these tumours out and read them together, they form a story of their own.鈥澛
Williams admits that his radical, decidedly non-linear approach to the book鈥檚 finale may make for a 鈥渨eird read.鈥 鈥淏ut, if you think about the way cancer operates, it has to interrupt the text. Cancer is a painful disruption of life. My recommendation is to ignore all the cancer subtexts on the first reading and just stick to the main text. On the second pass, read the cancer texts and this second story will emerge more clearly.鈥澛
As if this wasn鈥檛 ambitious enough, part four also includes another narrative, running parallel to the cancer story, on a video that goes viral. 鈥淲e see how things can reproduce and proliferate electronically as well,鈥 Williams says.聽
In many respects, Williams credits his background as a poet with giving him the literary freedom to experiment so boldly within his prose. Before he wrote聽Reproduction, he had made his mark with the acclaimed poetry collections聽You Know Who You Are听补苍诲听笔别谤蝉辞苍补濒蝉,听along with a book of short stories,聽Not Anyone鈥檚 Anything.
鈥淭he mechanics of fiction are so big, and when experiments go wrong it can be disastrous,鈥 Williams says. 鈥淚n poetry, the scale is so much smaller. You can play with language in various ways and it鈥檚 still pretty contained. I think my background in poetry is definitely where that freedom comes from in my writing. It helped me develop the courage to try different things.鈥澛
He adds: 鈥淚t would have been a lot easier to tell this family鈥檚 straight, chronological story over 40 years. But there鈥檚 not a lot of satisfaction in that, for me. These days we accept such challenges from our movies, music and TV shows, and I think books need to challenge us in these ways as well.鈥澛
The Calgary Distinguished Writers Program (CDWP) strives to advance the careers of Canadian聽writers, invigorate the Calgary writing community, and enhance the activities of the Faculty of Arts and the Department of English. The program achieves its objectives through two annual residencies: one for an emerging Canadian聽writer, and one for a聽distinguished writer of international stature.聽Applications for the 2021-22 Canadian聽Writer-in-Residence are聽.