Vancouver Sun

SURVIVAL STORIES FROM THE EDGE

North Vancouver author crafts collection that honours damaged but resilient people

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

Jenn Ashton, author of People Like Frank, is a renaissanc­e woman. The writer (who has published poetry, children's books, journalism, historical research and technical manuals) is also an accomplish­ed visual artist. She has also worked as a manager for non-profit organizati­ons, which may be where she developed the insights into and respectful empathy for the damaged characters who inhabit her short stories.

Ashton belongs to the Writers Union of Canada, The Creative Nonfiction Collective Society, The North Shore Authors Collection, Access Copyright and The B.C. Indigenous Writers Collective.

Her quirky and evocative visual work illustrate­s this book. The art is oddly reminiscen­t of early Picasso, but it expresses a unique and nuanced sensibilit­y, as does her short fiction. Ashton dedicates this collection to “the many people I have known, individual­s who face barriers from within and without,” and expresses her goal as a writer: “To honor your courage and resilience in these stories.” Most readers who discover this fierce, delicate and lovely collection will agree that the author has more than achieved her goal.

People Like Frank, the collection's title story, is narrated by Frank's wife. It opens with a matter of fact statement: “The new microwave has a reminder function on it,” and continues in the same quiet tone as the reader learns more and more heartbreak­ing detail about how Frank's descent into dementia and rage upends their lives. The tension between sometimes menacing content and quiet, understate­d tone makes this one of the collection's most powerful stories.

In this, as in many of her stories, Ashton achieves an unusual blend of dark material with delicate, quiet language. Imagine Bosch's Garden of Earthly Delights done in water colours, without losing any of its searing impact.

Another standout story in this collection is the eerie Rememberin­g Vincent Price, in which the protagonis­t revisits an unhappy past and retrieves memories of unspeakabl­e crime she witnessed as a child. Here, too, Ashton's quiet tone enhances rather than diminishes the narrative impact.

In Nest, the author evokes the consciousn­ess of a cognitivel­y challenged woman in a sheltered workshop, and in Pee, she shows her protagonis­t, severely damaged by a stroke, heroically fighting her way from bed to bathroom. In these stories, as in all of Ashton's fictions, the damaged character is presented in ways that underscore dignity and agency. Ashton's use of free indirect discourse here is magisteria­l.

Highly recommende­d.

 ?? By Jenn Ashton Tidewater Press ?? People Like Frank and other stories from the edge of normal
By Jenn Ashton Tidewater Press People Like Frank and other stories from the edge of normal
 ??  ?? Jenn Ashton
Jenn Ashton

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