Immigrants’ stories inspired debut novelistBy STEPHEN PATRICK CLARE
Sun, Sep 19 - 4:53 AM
  Journalist Chris Benjamin is a first-time novelist. His book, Drive-By Saviours, has recently been published. (Molly Crealock)
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LAUNCH Chris Benjamin will launch Drive-By Saviours on Sept. 22, 7 p.m., at The Company House, 2202 Gottingen St., in Halifax. |
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As
most writers will tell you, there is often a fine line between fact and
fiction — a small, grey space where worlds collide, and where
imagination, inspiration and perspiration conspire.
Halifax author and journalist Chris Benjamin recently crossed that line with his debut novel Drive-By Saviours.
"The stories I write as a journalist are simple because I’m just
assembling the facts and the opinions in a readable way," said Benjamin,
who is best known to local and area readers as a columnist with
Halifax’s alternative weekly newspaper, The Coast.
"With fiction I have to bring readers into an imaginary world and
convince them that it’s real," he continues. "It’s more of an art and
comes more from the heart. In fiction I can ramble. I may cut later if
it’s too much, but it’s always worth it to follow the words where they
take you. This is how you learn about your characters — you take them
places, make them do things, see how they react and what thoughts and
emotions they experience."
Benjamin notes that the new book — the story of an Indonesian-born
restaurant worker, a Toronto social worker and the chance encounter that
changes their lives — was born out of a lifelong love of storytelling.
"It’s something I’ve been doing since I was six, when I started
making up stories and writing them down, and later inventing characters
and chal-lenges for them to work their way through," he said.
"When you write stories you create worlds. You are godlike. Then you
can invite people to visit that world, to take a tour of it. When they
come home they see this world, the real world, differently."
Readers will appreciate his perspective; Drive-By Saviours is one of
the finest first narratives to emerge from Atlantic Canada in recent
memory. Well-balanced and masterfully crafted with a prose that is both
poignant and poised, the work is certain to be considered for literary
awards.
Inspiration came, he said, while he was working as a diversity
co-ordinator at a Toronto-based environmental organization in 2003.
"The stories I heard from new Canadians blew me away. These were
people, who, by choice or not, picked up their entire lives, everything
they’d ever known and relocated. Seeing these folks out of their
cultural context, trying to rebuild their lives from scratch. … I wanted
to write about that.
"I had also met my wife Miia around that time," he said, "and we
shared lots of travel stories and life stories. Somewhere out of all of
these mini-narratives Drive-by Saviours emerged."
The novel also contains a number of autobiographical elements.
"I share (character) Mark’s frustrations with the systems in place
that keep people out, that fail to hear the powerful stories of people’s
lives," he said. "And my politics probably leaked into the story,
thematically, in terms of what I chose to write about and how the
characters looked at things.
"Whatever part of me that is in the book isn’t necessarily the same
part of me that started writing it, however. My own characters
influenced me and changed me as I researched and wrote them."
That metamorphosis, he points out, is still in process.
"I’ve transformed from Chris the writer into Chris from marketing. Or
Chris from logistics: planning book launches, readings, a book tour,
writing blurbs and hiring musicians. I guess it’s what writers do when
our books come out to make sure it sells and gets award nominations and
allows us the chance to publish another one."
Stephen Patrick Clare is a freelance writer who lives in Halifax.