Calgary Herald

Sci-fi romance on giller prize short list

Giller Prize finalist’s sci-fi romance navigates time and intersecti­onal discrimina­tion

- ADINA BRESGE

TORONTO When Toronto-based author Thea Lim travels back to Singapore, she finds the place where she grew up no longer exists, at least not to her.

Of course, she still can visit the geographic landmarks of her youth. But in a country that seems to regenerate itself with every trip, Lim finds the passage of time has swept away the Singapore of her memories, rendering her a tourist in a place she once called home.

“Place is infected by time, and then time is also infected by place,” said Lim, one of five finalists vying for the $100,000 Scotiabank Giller Prize. “In the same way we can’t go back to the places of our past ... the past too takes on a feeling of being another place.”

But what about the future? This is the question that propels Lim’s Giller-shortliste­d debut novel An Ocean of Minutes ( Viking Canada), through the dimensions of love and loss in a genre-bending tale about time travel, the inevitabil­ity of endings and what happens after.

“Writers write about the questions that we’re haunted by, but I don’t think that the writing of the book actually answers those questions,” said Lim. “I think we just sort of infect other readers.”

At first, Lim said the impetus for the novel was to wrestle with a quandary posed by so many creative greats before her, including the goddess of pop, Cher, when she belted, “Do you believe in life after love?”

If love is an emotional “apocalypse,” said Lim, then she wanted to understand why one continues to risk new relationsh­ips, each heartbreak layering callouses of fortificat­ion from further grief.

“I think (it was) artistical­ly useful to put someone through the paces of heartbreak and to try to understand how is it that people go on,” she said. “How can we manage loss in a productive way without ignoring, I think, the enormity of the things that we’ve had to leave behind?”

This brought Lim to a different kind of emotional displaceme­nt, one she had not intended to write about. But as she burrowed down the chronologi­cal wormholes of time travel, she was struck by a familiar sense of unfamiliar­ity.

Having grown up moving back and forth from her birth country of Canada to her father’s homeland of Singapore, Lim was accustomed to feeling caught between universes; a skilled navigator of the liminal space between here and there, then and now.

If the past is a foreign country, as L.P. Hartley famously posited, then in An Ocean of Minutes, the future is a dystopia.

By turns a sweeping romance and a science-fiction epic, the novel begins in 1981 when 23-yearold Polly enters a Faustian bargain with the TimeRaiser corporatio­n to be sent 12 years into the future to 1993 in exchange for providing life-saving treatment for her partner, Frank, who has been infected with a flu ravaging the United States of America.

After being rerouted five years ahead of schedule, Polly arrives in 1998 to find her country has been bisected into two nations — the United States and America. She is working off her debt to TimeRaiser in Texas, now part of the sovereign America along with the rest of the South, while her and Frank’s planned rendezvous point lies on the other side of the border in the United States.

As a “Journeyman,” Polly, who is half-Lebanese but identifies as white, is not considered an American citizen. When her immigratio­n status is downgraded from a visa for workers with special skills to one associated with manual labour, she grapples with racial anxiety about being mistaken for Hispanic.

In the novel, prejudice manifests itself primarily as “chrono-discrimina­tion,” said Lim, a bias based on the time in which one was born. But she wanted to portray the ways in which layers of discrimina­tion can intersect, both in her fictional universe and the real world.

Given the parallels between TimeRaiser’s use of indentured labour and the legacy of slavery in the South, Lim felt it was important to be mindful of that history, without appropriat­ing the African-American experience.

Lim, who is of Chinese and white descent, said she feels “protective” of readers who might feel marginaliz­ed by the dominant gaze.

“I was sort of aware of all these stories around me that didn’t really match up with my own story and how I felt inside,” she said. “I really felt the need to have a really developed place inside of my head that I could retreat to. And maybe in a way, that’s sort of the beginning of becoming a writer.”

The winner of this year’s Giller will be announced Monday.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Thea Lim set out to write fiction, but found her own life intruded on the telling of her time-travel story An Ocean of Minutes.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Thea Lim set out to write fiction, but found her own life intruded on the telling of her time-travel story An Ocean of Minutes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada