New ebooks From Canadian Indies

9781927426012_cover Enlarge Cover View Excerpt
0 of 5
0 ratings
rated!
rated!
list price: $9.99
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
category: Literary Collections
published: Dec 2012
ISBN:9781927426012
publisher: Signature Editions

Black Teeth

And Other North End Souvenirs

by Ryszard Dubanski

tagged: canadian
Description

Black Teeth is a compelling collection of linked stories that explore growing up in Winnipeg's famously multicultural North End through its 1960s Golden Age and beyond, examining the strange dual legacy of that experience. While urban ethnic mixes and immigrant populations shift over time and place, every city has its foreign part, that transition zone where strangers, freaks, and outsiders -- the Other -- reside. Whether it's called "the East Side," "Cabbage Town," or "Chinatown," the questions remain the same: How do you fit in when you're defined as different, a "dirty DP"? Does the language you speak change the self? How do you become normal? How can you belong? Or can you?

The pieces that make up Black Teeth move from the challenge of penetrating a new language, goofy pangs of first love, beautiful nuns, ugly guns, the dangers of teen ennui, and the quirky pleasures of interpreting culture through food, to a son's struggle for connection with his remote, mysterious father, and the wrenching loss of a parent to madness. Throughout, the doubled vision of those who live and write in a second language pervades this collage-portrait of a unique place, and of the immigrant experience that lies at the dark heart of Canada.

About the Author

Ryszard Dubanski

Awards
  • Short-listed, Carol Shields Winnipeg Book Award
Editorial Review

Replete with small epiphanies and unabashed impressions, this curiously titled memoir chronicles first-time author Ryszard Dubanski's personal odyssey as a Polish immigrant kid living in Winnipeg's North End during the 1960s and '70s. From the outset, Dubanski pulls no punches in recounting his bittersweet journey through childhood and adolescence. Written in a frank, conversational style, the book begins with a quirky vignette about the writer's first day of school. On this occasion, he endures teasing because of his blackened teeth, the result of an inadequate diet during years spent in a displaced persons' camp. Though the teacher intervenes on his behalf, the feeling of being different never leaves Dubanski. "Being a DP kid...a displaced person, a refugee, I knew what it was to be an outsider," he writes."While my address was in the 'Peg, the place where I ate my perogies and changed my socks, our home's psychic core lay on the other side of the planet."

— Winnipeg Free Press

Buy this book at:

X
Contacting facebook
Please wait...