EDMONTON - Even though she’s lived in Edmonton since 1993, Dolly Dennis has never been able to let go of the many decades she spent in Montreal.
So it’s no surprise that her debut novel, Loddy-Dah (Guernica), sees the recently retired administrative assistant and multi-faceted writer — who has written for newspapers, literary journals, anthologies and the stage — returning to the scene of her youth, amid the bustle and turmoil of the end of the 1960s.
It’s a period that has become shorthand for social change, from Woodstock to Kent State. But Montreal felt that change more acutely than many other cities, Dennis says.
“It was just the best time to be young and idealistic,” she says of 1967 in particular, which is when Loddy-Dah begins. “The world was changing. Montreal was changing. It was just before the time that people started to leave. I wanted to capture that time, because I didn’t want anybody to forget what it was like. It’s not the Montreal that’s there now.
“I always knew I would write about it. I just didn’t know it would be 40 years later.”
When Loddy-Dah begins, Expo 67 is underway, putting a global spotlight on Montreal and giving the city a much-needed injection of energy and confidence. By the time it wraps up, the October Crisis of 1970, and other attacks carried out by the FLQ before that, have brought Montreal a much different kind of attention.
This, Dennis says, was the beginning of a sea change that would really take off in 1976 with the election of the Parti Québécois, whose reign in provincial politics she calls “a dictatorship.” She singles out the Charter of the French Language, which established French as the official language of Quebec and mandated, among other things, that all English commercial signage and advertising must be removed or accompanied by the same text, in French, that is at least the same size. Dennis, who is bilingual, watched as many companies, including her employer, the Montreal-based Sun Life Financial, moved their headquarters to Toronto in protest.
“It was very stressful living under those kinds of conditions,” Dennis remembers. “People just don’t get it unless they were there.”
In Loddy-Dah, however, these issues have not yet come to a boil. Her eponymous protagonist works for a small English-language theatre company, struggles with overeating (especially in contrast to her sister, who suffers from anorexia), and tries to find her way in the world.
There are some dark passages. We learn that Loddy has dealt with sexual violence since she was a child, at the hands of a cruel stepfather. And Dennis is particularly acute at showing the ways in which adult overweight women are taunted, groped and condescended to by men who see them not as people, but objects to be discarded.
“I always work with character first,” Dennis says of her writing process. “I put on some weight after menopause and went to this weight-loss group. There was this obese girl there, and I studied her. She had dirty hair and always wore red. She had a pretty tragic life. And that’s where I found Loddy.” To find her name, Dennis scoured the Journal’s obituaries page, where she eventually came across a recently deceased 92-year-old named Charlotte. For short, Lotte — or Loddy.
Earlier this month, Dennis returned to Montreal to launch her novel at the Blue Met international literary festival. She says that while some residents aren’t keen on revisiting these chapters in the city’s past, she wasn’t going to let that get in her way.
“That’s one thing about the aging process. You find out who you are, and you don’t care what anybody else says. It’s such a wonderful thing to come to grips with.
“What are they going to do, burn me at the stake? That’s been done.”
Dolly Dennis launches Loddy-Dah at Audreys Books (10702 Jasper Ave.) on Thursday, June 12 at 7 p.m.
© Copyright (c) The Edmonton Journal
6 comments:
A nice article. Well I'm sitting here in Toronto and I see an update in my email from Canada Post saying that Loddy Dah is waiting for me in my Super Mailbox.
The skies just opened and we are getting quite a downpour. So......I have to be patient and wait for a ray or two of sun and go and rescue my book. Looking forward to holding it in my hands. New books like new records are a trip.
BobB
Books are a cool thing. I still prefer hardcover books, but all books are great. I have a fair collection of them., but everytime 1 of the kids moves 'back in' for a while my stuff gets packed up & put away again......lol
I can relate Les. My books have migrated (not all of them) over the years. Some I know where they are. Others.....well I hope someone enjoyed them. I still have many books packed away in boxes and others in bookcases. It's embarrassing to think how long some of them have been in that state. So I won't admit how long.
I did get down to the Super mailbox and rescued Loddy Dah this afternoon after the rain let up. It was so nice to get my hands on it after all this time.
Thursday, I am having some eye surgery (cataract). So Thursday is not a reading day. Friday I'll be pretty good. By the weekend I'll have eyesight probably better than I ever had (had one eye done already...so I know what to expect).
So.....this weekend looks to be a great weekend to read and celebrate Dolly's achievement, Montreal and new and improved eyesight.
Oh yeah, I'll have a little single malt to go with it all.
So Dolly....Brava!!
BobB
Hope your eye surgery goes well, and if you can read that quickly after an operation then that's amazing,.Enjoy the book.
I don't have the guts to get eye laser surgery ,I just can't bring myself around to allowing that (yet) I actually stopped reading for a little while because I couldn't really see the script all that well & it was frustrating.I could read fine in real light (outside) but difficult inside with a lamp..so I had the eyes tested & had to get (glorified readers)...lol That's where you pay $500 bucks ($502 actually) & get a fancy pair of glasses with 'nike logo' lol ...They are really just magnifier readers I could have got at a dollar store.........hahahaha
At least I can read a book compfortably again......
Cheers & have a good weekend. --LesF
Hi
got my eye fixed. All works well. Got caught up in work related stuff, but I am reading Loddy Dah and thoroughly enjoying it! Thought I'd be finished it by now but other things intervened. About half way through and it is becoming one of those books I don't want to finish. Then what will I do? but, I guess it will have to happen....this weekend no doubt.
So Dolly....I'm loving the book. It's wonderful !!
BobB
Hi
Finished reading Loddy Dah.
It was a wonderful read. And an added treat if you are a formal Montrealer / Verdun-ite. The book stands very well on its own even if you aren't from La Belle Province, but it's always nice to read about turf and times you have covered as well.
It held me to the last page. Truly a wonderful read!
Very nicely done, Dolly. Congratulations again. Thank you.
BobB
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