Days Of Sand
Helene Dorion
Cormorant Books
$18
paper
111pp
978-1-897151-07-5
This becomes evident early on, in a flashback to the ’60s, where we see Hélène trailing behind her father in an anonymous shopping centre parking lot. She looks up to the night sky and suddenly comes to the realization that growing up is like “being sucked toward top and toward bottom at the same time.” So begins Dorion’s straightforward cataloguing of life’s most vexing truths. One day we will die, as will our parents, as will our children. It doesn’t matter who we are, where we are, or when. The outcome for a little girl following her father through a parking lot is the same as it is for a prisoner rotting away in a Roman dungeon. As horrific as that may sound, there is some comfort in this, at least in Dorion’s telling of it. Her tone is one of acceptance, as Jonathan Kaplansky’s translation ably conveys: “The sand runs out and the wave soon will carry everything away; all we can do is love.”
This is a prose work that has been billed, inexplicably, as a novel. It might be more helpful to approach it as one would a poem or even a piece of inspirational or devotional writing; as something to keep by your bed to soothe your mind on troubled nights, a reminder that we are all in this together. mRb
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