Charity
By (Author) Keath Fraser
Biblioasis
Biblioasis
26th April 2021
Canada
General
Fiction
Family life fiction
813.54
Paperback
128
Width 114mm, Height 177mm
Denise's stepdaughter is a med student who swims ocean marathons and runs off to Africa with a family friend four times her age-and also battles an eating disorder. When Judy, Greta's birth mother, returns from Japan (to which she ran off herself, with a Mexican tennis pro) and tries to ingratiate herself with the husband and daughter she left, Denise must navigate their complicated relationships with each other and with her-while attempting to bring Greta's addiction to light and learning how to live, in both under- and overfed worlds, more charitably.
Praise for Charity
Like Carol Shields Unless, and its meditation on goodness, Charity is a powerful work of philosophical and moral inquiry, rooted in skilfully wrought characters and sly storytelling.
Toronto Star
"Keath Fraser is a master storyteller."
The Malahat Review
Charityfor all its brevityis] a dense, deliberately paced work What Fraser is after in Charity is a sincere examination of family in all its moral ambiguity, including its barbed and occasionally corrosive aspects ... Fraser is adept at pulling the rug out from under a readers moral surety. That he manages all this in such a compact form proves that the novella is capable of detonating shock waves in a way other genres may have to work harder to achieveif they are able to do so at all.
Quill & Quire
Readers in the market for a fiction short might enjoy this comic novellain which a stepmother navigates the complex relationships between her husband, his ex and their daughter.
Globe & Mail
"Fraser has crafted a conflict and characters so nuanced that the book could triple in length without feeling inflated. Charity reminds us of the power of a novella, the feel of the narrative straining against the borders of itself, the discipline in not allowing the story to be a single line longer than it needs to be ... Frasers characters slyly and unobtrusively rise out of the deceptively slim volume and exist in the room alongside you. It is always a mini-miracle when this happens; and the fact that it happens in such a mini book is a miracle all the more."
Richard Kelly Kemick, Malahat Review
Praise for Keath Fraser
The sheer exuberance of language, the sureness with which Fraser captures the movements of the working mind, makes this book a joy to read.
Ottawa Citizen
Frasers controlled and confident writing gives us a rich sense of the longing of his fully drawn characters ... a remarkable, bittersweet celebration.
Quill & Quire (starred review)
The range of Frasers characters is astonishingnot an author who can be ignored.
January Magazine
If you really want to journey into the heart of darkness, youd be advised to travel with Vancouver writer Keath Fraser, a man of extraordinary talents.
Bronwyn Drainie
Keath Fraser is one of the most intelligent writers working in Canada.
The Malahat Review
Keath Fraser won the Chapters / Books in Canada First Novel Award for his 1995 novel Popular Anatomy. His stories and novellas have been published in many anthologies in Canada and abroad. Collections of his short fiction include Taking Cover and Telling My Love Lies. The volume Foreign Affairs was short-listed for a Governor General's Award and won the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize. He is the author of As For Me and My Body, a memoir of his friend Sinclair Ross; and of The Voice Gallery, a narrative of his far-flung travels among broken voices. The royalties from his international best-selling anthologies Bad Trips and Worst Journeys: The Picador Book of Travel were given to Canada India Village Aid (CIVA), the late NGO founded by George Woodcock. His recent books include Damages: Selected Stories, 1982-2012, and Charity, a novella.