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Grin Reaping catalogues the foibles of the fictional Boyle family. In a series of fourteeninterconnected short stories and musings, Rudy Boyle, a Northern Ontario college Englishteacher stuck both in middle age and in the middle of his five siblings, transforms the strangenessof his everyday life into exaggerated home-movie prose. From the significance of tuna fish andBotox, the threat of coyotes and aliens, to the big-ticket items of mortality, gender, climate-change, and Armageddon, Rudy tackles a range of topics with a wry, self-deprecating wit. As hevariously shares such snippets, he exaggerates small and mundane situations into comiccelebrations of the life of the mind, never letting the truth get in the way of a great story. Hisreminiscences deal not only with the absurdities of human nature, but also encompass the grief oflosing family. Rudy is bedeviled by neurosis, and cowed before the insignificant things in hisworld. He talks largely about small matters and trivially about great affairs. It is the nature of hisdilemma and the dilemma of his nature.
Once in a while, you come across that rare writer who makes you laugh and think at the same time, even in the same sentence. Rod Carley pulls it off in Grin Reaping, an off-kilter look at death that left me feeling happy, enlightened, and very much alive.
Terry Fallis, two-time winner of the Stephen Leacock Medal for Humour
Rod Carley’s previous book Kinmount was nominated for the Stephen Leacock Medal for Humour. He may well win that award for this warmly moving, wildly inventive and wickedly funny collection of tall tales. One of the great compliments you can give a book is to say, “you can’t put it down.” That doesn’t apply to Grin Reaping. You will have to put this book down repeatedly because you will be laughing so hard. Indeed, you will laugh out loud on almost every single page. So settle down, buckle up, and prepare yourself.
Ian Ferguson – Leacock Award Winner, Village of the Small Houses.
“Imagine if a short story and a peculiar incident had a wisecracking baby possessed of unusual wisdom and a deeply humane sensibility. That almost, almost describes Rod Carley’s Grin Reaping. Line-by-line these episodes are fierce and funny and many of them leave indelible scorch marks on their targets, even while we grow to care about all the characters. The collection is generous, odd and quite wonderful. I hope many people get to meet the unforgettable Rudy Boyle and his associates.I, for one, will never think about MacGyver the same way again. My view of elevator lifts, dogs, and weddings has also been altered forever. And please, do not get me started on the exceptional tooth-regeneration of the brontosaurus.
,p>Susan Juby, author of The Woefield Poultry Collective and winner of the Stephen Leacock Medal for Humour“When I say I laughed out loud at Grin Reaping, I mean it. Carley writes with a quick wit, keen observational skill, and a sense of playfulness that infuses the language on every page. But to classify this as simply a “funny” book does it a disservice–beneath the surface, this is a book with a truly tender heart. These are stories shot through with a current of grief and loss, and populated with unforgettable characters who, despite their clever jokes and quirky worldviews, are authentic, vulnerable, and wholly human. Grin Reaping is a joy to read, and Rod Carley is a writer to watch.”
Amy Jones, author of We’re All in This Together, shortlisted for the Leacock Medal for Humour
“Carley scribbles in that special space between humour and humiliation, the quaint and the absurd. The stories in Grin Reaping are both familial and familiar, cheeky, wistful and human on the best level. His playfulness with language and comedic timing are masterful. Read it and reap.
Ali Bryan, author of The Figgs, shortlisted for the Leacock Medal.
“If you explore some of Canada’s more picturesque literary trails, you might happen upon the spot where Robertson Davies’ “The Diary of Samuel Marchbanks” intersects with Stephen Leacock’s “Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town” as well as the best Dave and Morley stories from Stuart McLean’s “Vinyl Café.” That’s where you’ll find Rod Carley’s Grin Reaping, a collection of short stories blending whimsy, pathos, melancholy and cheer. You’ll find elevators to heaven and talking pets sharing the page with the stark realities of aging, death and dementia. It’s an emotionally complex journey, both uplifting and heartbreaking, and it’s a literary trip I’m glad to have taken.”
Dr. Randal Graham, author of the Beforelife stories.
“Grin Reaping is a comic blast of a book. It’s so wryly observed with sharply hilarious specifics — one page in and I found myself booted back to my tiny Canadian hometown with all its rural absurdities. Rod’s got a gift for giving dignity to people who’d probably snort-laugh if you ever called them ‘dignified’. In these pages, you’ll find a definitive power ranking of Timbits decided by teachers enduring a winter work strike. You’ll read of friends and family caring for their pets — be they hermaphrodite border collies or the ghosts of long-dead cats. And you’ll learn about a man who constructed a shrine to Muskoka via Hollywood celebrity Kurt Russell. But you’ll also realize what a huge heart Rod Carley has, as he lovingly (in a very Rod Carley way) eulogizes family members he’s lost by transforming their lives into enduring small town myths.”
Sean Reycraft, screenwriter for The Witching Hour, Coroner, Slings & Arrows, and Degrassi.
226 Pages
8in * 5in * 1in
1lb
June 18, 2022
CA
9781988989464
eng
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