The Green Chamber
By (Author) Martine Desjardins
Translated by Fred A. Reed
Translated by David Homel
Talon Books,Canada
Talon Books,Canada
10th July 2018
Canada
General
Fiction
Paperback
208
Width 139mm, Height 215mm, Spine 14mm
276g
Once a modest farmer, the patriarch of the Delorme family has made a killing when he sold his land to a railway company. Following in his footsteps, his son Louis-Dollard has built a luxurious apartment building in the center of town and is now a wealthy landlord. At his father's death, he robs his brother of his inheritance in order to build a house designed like a bank, with brass-grilled counters and an underground vault hidden behind the furnace. The vault's ceiling is covered with a mosaic of verdigris pennies, and its walls are painted with the same green ink as dollar bills. Louis-Dollard, his miserly wife Estelle and his three spinster sisters love money so much that they literally revere it, with the Green Chamber serving as their place of worship. They have elevated domestic penny-pinching to an art form. And they intend for their heir, Vincent, to make a highly profitable marriage. The arrival, in the neighborhood, of a rich young woman, Penny Sterling, makes them even greedier. They pull all stops to seduce her into joining the family. But Vincent will have none of it, nor will Penny. Together, they conspire to set fire to the Green Chamber and bring the family down.
Martine Desjardins was born in the town of Mount Royal, Quebec, in 1957. The second child of six, she started writing short stories when she was seventeen. After receiving a bachelors degree in Russian and Italian studies at the University of Montreal, she went on to complete a masters degree in comparative literature, exploring humour in Dostoevskys The Devils. She worked as an assistant editor-in-chief at ELLE Qubec magazine and, for ten years, was book reviewer for Lactualit, an award-winning French-language current affairs magazine in Canada. Her first novel, Le cercle de Clara, was nominated for the Prix littraires du Qubec in 1998. She was awarded the Prix Ringuet for Lvocation in 2006, and the Sunburst Award for Excellence in Canadian Literature of the Fantastic for Maleficium in 2013. She received the Prix Jacques-Brossard de la science-fiction et du fantastique for Maleficium in 2010, and again for La chambre verte in 2017. Desjardins currently lives in the town of Mount Royal with her fox-terrier Winnie.