#52 – Fat Woman, by Leon Rooke
I met Leon Rooke briefly in 2001 at the Eden Mills Writers’ Festival, the same day I met Sheila Heti and George Elliott Clarke. I heard him read some stories, at least one of which hadn’t been published yet. He didn’t need a microphone; his voice wasn’t just loud, it was big. You could hear it through the entire festival grounds. You could feel it. I told him that I had never read any of his books, but that after that performance I would go and buy the next one I found. And I did, in fact I bought two (Shakespeare’s Dog, and Painting the Dog). Fat Woman is my third, and I didn’t realize until I was nearly finished it that it was his first novel. My edition isn’t the one you see pictured here. Mine is a tacky blue mass-market paperback from a company called General Publishing, part… Continue Reading