Rating: **
Tags: Fiction
Summary
Harry Boyd, a hard-bitten refugee from failure in Toronto
television, has returned to a small radio station in the
Canadian North. There, in Yellowknife, in the summer of 1975,
he falls in love with a voice on air, though the real woman,
Dido Paris, is both a surprise and even more than he
imagined. Dido and Harry are part of the cast of eccentric, utterly
loveable characters, all transplants from elsewhere, who form
an unlikely group at the station. Their loves and longings,
their rivalries and entanglements, the stories of their pasts
and what brought each of them to the North, form the centre.
One summer, on a canoe trip four of them make into the Arctic
wilderness (following in the steps of the legendary
Englishman John Hornby, who, along with his small party,
starved to death in the barrens in 1927), they find the
balance of love shifting, much as the balance of power in the
North is being changed by the proposed Mackenzie Valley gas
pipeline, which threatens to displace Native people from
their land.
Elizabeth Hay has been compared to Annie Proulx, Alice
Hoffman, and Isabel Allende, yet she is uniquely herself.
With unforgettable characters, vividly evoked settings, in
this new novel, Hay brings to bear her skewering intelligence
into the frailties of the human heart and her ability to tell
a spellbinding story. Written in gorgeous prose, laced with
dark humour,
Late Nights on Air is Hay’s most
seductive and accomplished novel yet.
On the shortest night of the year, a golden evening
without end, Dido climbed the wooden steps to Pilot’s
Monument on top of the great Rock that formed the heart of
old Yellowknife. In the Netherlands the light was long and
gradual too, but more meadowy, more watery, or else hazier,
depending on where you were. . . . Here, it was subarctic
desert, virtually unpopulated, and the light was uniformly
clear.
On the road below, a small man in a black beret was
bending over his tripod just as her father used to bend over
his tape recorder. Her father’s voice had become the
wallpaper inside her skull, he’d made a home for
himself there as improvised and unexpected as these little
houses on the side of the Rock — houses with histories
of instability, of changing from gambling den to barber shop
to sheet metal shop to private home, and of being moved from
one part of town to another since they had no
foundations.
—
From
Late Nights On Air