I’m not
sure I know how to begin to describe The
Letters of Ivor Punch by Scottish writer Colin MacIntyre. It’s a novel, of
sorts. You might think it’s a collection of short stories, and that makes
sense, for a while. You know it has a strange narrative structure – without a
doubt. It moves back in forth in time, from the 19th century to the
21st century.
If I said
it’s about Pan Am Flight 106 that was blown up over Lockerbie, Scotland, and
about Charles Darwin, and an older man who writes letters to President Obama, and
children disclaimed, unclaimed, and reclaimed, and about a uncle who turns out
to be your grandfather (a recurring theme), and a funeral parlor, I might be
getting close.
So, it is
a wee bit wacky. Ivor Punch is the man writing the letters, asking President
Obama to stop the British government from releasing the man who planted the
bomb on the Pan Am flight. It’s because his brother and sister-in-law were
aboard that flight. Except it wasn’t really his brother. But he wanders all
over as he writes, and he doesn’t even send the letters.
And there’s
the woman back in the 1860s, who moved with her sister to this remote island in
the Hebrides off the coast of Scotland (far, far off the coast) (really far).
The sister is famous as a world traveler and explorer. The one who stays home
and keeps the house falls in love with the mailman, who will be an ancestor of
Ivor Punch.
Author
MacIntyre will even find time to insert himself in the story – the interloper
who steal the name of the local historical society (and he did something of the
kind, in real life).
The Letters of Ivor Punch won the 2015 First Book Award
given by the Edinburgh International Book Festival. MacIntyre is also
publishing a picture book for children this coming summer, entitled The Humdrum
Drum, and I can’t imagine what that will be like. And MacIntyre is also a
songwriter – his band is called Mull
Historical Society and yes, that’s the name he swiped from the Isle of
Mull, where he was brought up.
Colin MacIntyre |
It’s
actually a serious novel. That is, until you reach a point not too far from the
end. I won’t say what it is, but you should know that there is a scene that
caused me to laugh until the tears came and my wife thought I was strangling. I
finally calmed down, resumed reading, and promptly started laughing all over
again.
It’s a
crazy book. It makes you think about how the idea of place shapes people. It
makes you realize how odd families can be and often are. It argues that the
past is always with us, so you might as well call the past is the present, and
maybe the future.
I loved
this wacky book and the story it tells.
Top photograph: a view of the
island of Skye, one of the Inner Hebrides islands, by Rudiger Shafer via Public Domain Pictures.
Used with permission.
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