The Province

The unfinished business of a father’s final days

End of life memoir The Home Stretch captures the roaring silence of things unsaid

- TOM SANDBORN Tom Sandborn lives and writes in Vancouver. He welcomes your feedback and story tips at tos65@telus.net.

We are never, despite our best efforts, ready for death. When the death is that of a parent and the family is, like so many, weighed down with unfinished business, things unsaid and unforgiven hurts, death is even harder to face.

The roaring silence of things unsaid haunts many families, but when a member of the family is a writer, the unresolved fights and complaints can become more than private tragedy. They can become the raw material for a memoir, essay, novel or short story. And if the writer can successful­ly transform family grief into artful prose, you get an elegant accomplish­ment like George K. Ilsley’s new memoir The Home Stretch: a Father, a Son And All the Things They Never Talk About.

Ilsley, born in Nova Scotia, wrote the intriguing experiment­al novel ManBug in 2006 and the short story collection Random Acts of Hatred in 2003. He now lives in Vancouver.

In 2010 he was the writer in residence at the Berton House Writers’ Retreat in Dawson Creek. He has published his stories in magazines and anthologie­s, and in 2014, his memoir of his mother’s death, Bingo and Black Ice, won subTerrain Magazine’s Lush Triumphant award for creative non-fiction.

Ilsley is a highly competent, if not dazzling prose stylist who crafts his story about the last years of his father’s life with the same care and polish he brings to all his published pieces. After his mother’s death, and as his father’s slow decline brought the author closer and closer to being an orphan, Ilsley made regular visits home to Nova Scotia. The Home Stretch is his account of those visits and the thoughts about elder care and end-of-life issues the visits inspired.

Give Ilsley points for honesty. His portrait of his father — stubborn, irascible and in the end bewildered by his losses — is searingly honest and moving. And the author doesn’t spare himself in this exercise in family realism. Every moment of ego attachment, spleen or panic is portrayed with painful accuracy.

No one emerges from The Home Stretch as a hero, but all the characters in this drama of small-town loss and bafflement are shown with compassion in all their human complexity. At a time when so many of us are dealing

with mortality during the pandemic, this book will provide thoughtful comfort and artful relief to many readers.

 ??  ?? Author George K. Ilsley scores points for honesty in telling the story of the last years of his father’s life.
Author George K. Ilsley scores points for honesty in telling the story of the last years of his father’s life.
 ??  ?? The Home Stretch: a Father, a Son, And All the Things They Never Talk About George K. Ilsley | Arsenal Pulp Press (Vancouver)
$19.95
The Home Stretch: a Father, a Son, And All the Things They Never Talk About George K. Ilsley | Arsenal Pulp Press (Vancouver) $19.95

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