cover image 1979

1979

Ray Robertson. Biblioasis (Consortium, U.S. dist.; UTP, Canadian dist.), $14.95 trade paper (250p) ISBN 978-1-77196-096-0

Robertson (I Was There the Night He Died) centers this novel on Tom Buzby, an affable, Tang-drinking 13-year-old boy who delivers newspapers to the residents of the small town of Chatham, Ont. The low-key coming-of-age story captures Tom’s days following his parents’ divorce and traces his money problems, familial relationships, thoughts on local and world politics, and existential questions of assorted depths. Introducing readers to people whom Tom encounters on his paper route, the novel gives readers views into the sad, regret-filled, misbegotten, and occasionally contented days of various residents of Chatham in more than 30 short prose passages with newspaper-style headlines, such as “Average Guy Lives Average Life.” In first- and third-person narration, several figures—including an immigrant from China, an Auschwitz survivor, and a former athlete stricken with disease—reflect on life. Tom’s teenage experiences have their moments but are generally hampered by their ordinariness, and Robertson’s writing isn’t sufficiently lyrical to gild those mundane events. Robertson’s novel nods heavily to Edgar Lee Masters’s Spoon River Anthology, but it doesn’t carry the power of that work. (Mar.)