|
|
| |
bio
words
latest musings
top ten
nasty past
contact sfh
facebook |
|
 |
Warren Kinsella is the author(!) of Party Favours, published by
HarperCollins in 1997. Party Favours briefly flitted onto various
best-seller lists, like a beautiful, inoffensive little butterfly. It then
met a harsh and lonely death, as all butterflies do.
Excerpt: "Ottawa is an unhappy, unpleasant little place, where a lot gets said and
little gets done. Although it aspires to be much more, it isn't ever going to be more than
that: a former lumber town, packed with hundreds of megalomaniacs essentially lacking in
souls....I had come to Ottawa with the belief that the good guys and the bad guys were
readily distinguishable, and that my job would be to chronicle the achievements of the
former, and the misdeeds of the latter. But it hadn't worked out that way."
Now it can be revealed to a breathless nation, none of whom suspected it in
the least: Warren was Jean Doe! Shock! Horror! In 1997, over a few
weekends, Warren wrote a novel (his first and, hopefully, last) called Party
Favours. It told the tale of an ambitious Liberal Finance Minister,
scheming to overthrow a democratically-elected Liberal Prime Minister. It
was a moderate best-seller, but not for long! Far-sighted critics like
Warren's friends Paul Wells and Susan Delacourt lined up to be the first to
beat the stuffing out of the well-meaning little roman a clef. A Liberal PM
facing a coup led by one of his own cabinet ministers, snorted these
high-priced nattering nabobs of negativity. What an absurd plot! What an
implausible story! Er...whatever you say, folks. The Globe and Mail called
it "frothy," as we recall, and Clare Hoy liked it a lot, but that is never
something to brag about. Buy it if you dare, and ask yourself: does art
(even poorly-executed art) really imitate life? In Ottawa, bien sur.
Buy this book
All contents copyright 2006 warrenkinsella.com.
No reproduction whatsoever, in any form, without permission.
|
 |
|