An Okanagan reading series will feature two celebrated local writers who will share their thoughts on how writing can contribute to reconciliation.
Guests will have the chance to be immersed in the worlds of Brian Thomas Isaac and Harold Rhenisch at a Valley Voices reading Feb. 7 at Bean Scene Cafe.
Rhenisch, a Vernon poet, grew up on a Similkameen valley orchard, flying kites and pruning fruit trees under the winter stars to make space for light.
West 琉璃神社 writer Isaac grew up flying kites and fishing in storms on the Okanagan Indian Reserve near Falkland, in a shack without electric lights or running water.
Rhenisch went to university to study poetry and has since published 34 books. The book that was 55 years in the making, Tree Whisperer, is about what trees and orchards can teach us about how to speak with the land, even in a post-colonial society.
Isaac quit school in Grade 8 and eventually went to work in the oil field. He was 71 when his debut novel, All the Quiet Places, was published to acclaim in 2021.
The reading will be Isaac鈥檚 first in Vernon, which was the city in the 鈥50s and 鈥60s where Eddie Toma comes of age in All the Quiet Places. Isaac says his protagonist鈥檚 story is not biographical but is 鈥渆motionally true.鈥
鈥淚n school I had always loved to write poetry and to read, so when I retired, I was happy to have more time to read. When I began to write, my life and a lot of tears poured out of me onto the paper,鈥 says Isaac, whose wife submitted one of his first stories to a Penticton writer鈥檚 festival. The story won, and so he continued.
鈥淚t took me years to hone my writing skills and to realize writing fiction was easier than biography. But all the prior years of work provided fodder for many stories. When All the Quiet Places was completed and ready to be published, the emotions I felt were enormous and freeing. I had allowed myself to be vulnerable.鈥
Isaac鈥檚 debut won the 2022 Indigenous Voices Award, was a finalist for the Governor General鈥檚 Award and the Amazon Canada First Novel Award, and was longlisted for the prestigious Scotiabank Giller Prize, as well as CBC鈥檚 Canada Reads.
This past fall, after a bidding war, Isaac signed a two-book, six-figure deal with Penguin Random House. His second book, Bones of a Giant, will be released in 2025.
Considering endings and paying attention is also at the root of Rhenisch鈥檚 work 鈥 both in his poetry and pruning. A theme from Tree Whisperer is listening to the body鈥檚 conversations with the earth to shear, shift weight within, give rhythm and let a line bask in light.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a dance,鈥 says Rhenisch. 鈥淚f people leave Tree Whisperer feeling like poetry is a real thing and the places in their lives have been more communicative than what they鈥檝e been taught in school, that would be a great takeaway.鈥 He will expand the theme with poems on the craft of landscape from his book: Landings: Poems from Iceland.
One story that features in Rhenisch鈥檚 forthcoming book, The Salmon Shanties 鈥 a sequence of Cascadian poems and fancy dances 鈥 is that of Paul Terbasket, a smelqmix farmer jailed for watering his Blind Creek orchard in 1923, the last year of Indigenous fruit growing in B.C. One of Terbasket鈥檚 apricot trees has survived. Recently, Rhenisch and Terbasket鈥檚 grandson grafted wood from the 100-year-old mother tree. Her daughters are now growing in Cawston, Penticton, Kamloops, Castlegar and Vernon.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a reconciliation project that doesn鈥檛 take place in words,鈥 says Rhenisch. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 have to be locked in settler culture鈥檚 rules. The land is leading us.鈥
At the Valley Voices reading at Bean Scene Cafe on Feb. 7, the doors will open at 6:30 p.m. with the reading starting at 7 p.m. Admission is by donation and books will be available for sale.
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