Synopses & Reviews
WINNER 2019 SCOTIABANK GILLER PRIZE
Reproduction is an energetically told, funny, and moving novel about — as the author himself has it — “how strangers become family.”
Set over three decades, from the early eighties through the 2000s, mainly in the racially and socioeconomically mixed and culturally vibrant Toronto neighborhood of Brampton, Reproduction tells the story of Felicia, a 19-year-old student from a West Indian family; and Edgar, the lazy-minded and impetuous heir of a wealthy German family. The two meet by chance when their dying mothers are assigned the same hospital room. After the death of Felicia’s mother, and the recovery of Edgar’s, Felicia drops out of high school and takes a job as caregiver to Edgar’s mother, and, eventually becomes Edgar’s lover. They are an odd couple indeed, but their affair, ripe with miscommunications, misunderstandings, and reprisals for perceived and real offenses, results in a pregnancy.
The story leaps forward more than a decade and Felicia’s son, Armistice, “Army,” for short, is a teenager fixated on a variety of get-rich-quick schemes that are as comic as they are indicative of the immigrant’s fear of falling through the cracks. Army and Felicia rent a home in a duplex from Olivier, a divorcee with two kids Army’s age. Here the book’s second happenstance “family” is introduced. Edgar re-enters their lives at a typically (for him) inopportune moment, and provides the catalyst for the book’s conclusion, which sees Felicia and Edgar reunited, in a sense, in illness, neatly closing the story’s arc.
A crooked love story, one in which love takes strange, winding paths and evolves within a context shaped not by solitude but by community, family, friends, and fleeting interactions with people that leave their marks on us forever.
Review
"Reproduction's genius is its weaponized empathy, the precision-etched intensity of Williams' gritty, witty, wholly unsentimental exploration of the collision of human hearts and the messy aftermath. Love, and its lack, form a spectrum that the characters bounce between, searching for connections, redemption and meaning." Eden Robinson, author of Monkey Beach and Son of a Trickster
Review
"In this novel about fathers who vanish and the families that spring up in their place, the Vancouver-based poet deftly weaves together the voices of a 14-year-old Black boy, a 16-year-old white girl and a motley crew of middle-aged parents who are all struggling to do right by their children — with mixed results." Chatelaine Magazine
Review
"Williams' Reproduction contains examples of the compromises and mutually agreed upon lies that bind families together. The ability of humans to wilfully ignore past misdeeds, to keep secrets for decades and forge on despite human frailty and failings are all clearly depicted in Williams' story." Winnipeg Free Press
Synopsis
WINNER 2019 SCOTIABANK GILLER PRIZE
Reproduction is an energetically told, funny, and moving novel about--as the author himself has said--"how strangers become family."
Set over three decades, from the early eighties through the 2000s, mainly in the socio-economically mixed and culturally diverse Toronto neighborhood of Brampton, Reproduction tells the story of Felicia, a nineteen-year-old student from a West Indian family, and Edgar, the lazy-minded and impetuous heir of a wealthy German family. The two meet by chance when their dying mothers are assigned the same hospital room. After the death of Felicia's mother, and the recovery of Edgar's, Felicia drops out of high school and takes a job as caregiver to Edgar's mother, only to eventually become Edgar's lover. They are an odd couple indeed, but their affair, ripe with miscommunications, misunderstandings, and reprisals for perceived and real offenses, results in a pregnancy.
The story leaps forward more than a decade and Felicia's son, Armistice, "Army," for short, is a teenager fixated on a variety of get-rich-quick schemes that are as comic as they are indicative of the immigrant's fear of falling through the cracks. Army and Felicia rent a home in a duplex from Olivier, a divorcee with two kids around Army's age. Here the book's second happenstance "family" is introduced. Edgar re-enters their lives at a typically (for him) inopportune moment, and provides the catalyst for the book's conclusion, which sees Felicia and Edgar reunited, in a sense, in illness, neatly closing the story's arc.
Reproduction is a crooked love story, one in which love takes strange, winding paths and evolves within a context shaped not by solitude but by community and the fleeting interactions with people that leave their marks on us forever.
Synopsis
WINNER OF THE 2019 SCOTIABANK GILLER PRIZE AND CBC'S BEST NOVEL OF THE YEAR, this best-selling debut novel is an energetically told, funny, and moving book about how strangers become family.
Reproduction tells a crooked love story in which love takes strange, winding paths and grows in a context shaped by community, family, longstanding friendships, and fleeting interactions that leave their mark on us forever.
Felicia, a nineteen-year-old student from a West Indian family, and Edgar, the lazy-minded and impetuous heir of a wealthy German family, meet by chance when their ailing mothers are assigned the same hospital room. After the death of Felicia's mother and the recovery of Edgar's, Felicia drops out of high-school and takes a job as caregiver to Edgar's mother. The odd-couple relationship between Edgar and Felicia, ripe with miscommunications, misunderstandings, and reprisals for perceived and real offenses, has some unexpected results.
Years later, Felicia's son Armistice--"Army" for short--is a teenager fixated on a variety of get-rich-quick schemes that are as comic as they are indicative of the immigrant son's fear of falling through the cracks. When Edgar re-enters Felicia's life at a typically (for him) inopportune moment, the book's exhilarating final act is set in the motion and the full import of its title is revealed.
"This gorgeous novel vibrates with life...Stylistically inventive and narratively compelling, Reproduction is stunning."--Aminatta Forna, author of The Memory of Love
"One of the most energetic, lively, funny, and sad novels of the year."--Quill & Quire, Book of the Year
"Williams's unsparing view on the past's repetition is heartrending. This ambitious experiment yields worthwhile results."--Publishers Weekly
"Witty, playful, and disarmingly offbeat--even as it hums with serious themes."--The Toronto Star
"Polyphonic and big-hearted."--Electric Literature
"A family saga like no other, with vivid characters and spectacular narrative twists . . . What makes it all work is Williams's exquisite writing and his willingness to take risk with form. This is a fresh and exciting literary voice."--NOW Toronto, Book of the Year
"Both funny and poignant, powerful and playful."--The Calgary Herald
"Reproduction is an inventive and tender portrait of family life in all its forms."--Rabble
"Reproduction's genius is its weaponized empathy, the precision-etched intensity of Williams' gritty, witty, wholly unsentimental exploration of the collision of human hearts and the messy aftermath."--Eden Robinson, author of Monkey Beach and Son of a Trickster
"Reminiscent of Miriam Toews's novel All My Puny Sorrows in its balance between grief and humour."--Quill & Quire
"Williams's compassion for his characters transforms them from ordinary beings into uncommon souls. We know these people: their flaws, their foibles and their fuck ups. We recognize them because we share the same vagaries of living, wherever we are born."--Aminatta Forna, author of The Memory of Love
"The startling brilliance of Ian Williams stems from his restlessness with form. His ceaseless creativity in sussing out the right patterning of story, the right vernacular nuance, the right diagram and deftly dropped reference--all in service of vividly illuminating the intermingled comedy and trauma of family."--David Chariandy, author of Brother
"Reproduction is a brilliant modernist symphony, a truly unique blend of character, voice, sound, and style that shows the many different ways family can be made, and what the concept of family actually means in diverse contexts. A surprising, intriguing, and moving novel by a proven talent."--Marion Abbott, Mrs. Dalloway's Bookstore, Berkeley CA
"A daring and funny intergenerational family saga . . . Williams, a poet, brings a thrilling linguistic verve to this already-gripping story, and his restless experimental prose makes Reproduction fly off the page."--Danny Caine, Raven Bookstore, Lawrence KS
About the Author
Poet, short story writer, and novelist Ian Williams was named one of “ten Canadian writers to watch out for” by CBC in 2018. His poetry has been shortlisted for the Griffin Poetry Prize and the Robert Kroetsch Poetry Book Award. He won the Danuta Gleed Literary Award for his short stories. Williams holds a PhD in English from the University of Toronto and is currently an assistant professor of poetry in the Creative Writing program at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. Reproduction, his debut novel, was a finalist for the Amazon first novel prize, was a CBC Spring & Black History Month pick, and dubbed one of the “Buzziest Books of 2019” by Chatelaine Magazine.