So I've discovered a recent new 'genre'(not sure if thats the right word.. maybe sub-genre) of small town Canada books where nothing 'really' happens but they have extremely intimate, or detailed relationships, great character studies, and just really well written descriptions of life in a small town.
It started with Miriam Toew's A Boy of Good Breeding, and now with Bad Ideas.
Growing up in Morrisburg, you grow up hearing the story of Ken Carter as a sort of mythical character, something that you kind of don't believe really happened. Especially not in such a small town as ours.
I know the author is local, but her ability to make Preston Mills feel so unbelievably accurate is more credit to her writing skills than her place of origin. I loved the look back at the Seaway history with Claire and Darrens story, contrasting, though I find it disturbing on a personal level that the same problems, the same problematic people, the same amount of vitriol that existed in the 50's for Carole, in the 70's for Tammy and Trudy, also existed in the 90's for well... me.
A beautiful, haunting portrayal of the not so perfect side of living in a small town(any small town, but especially mine), the people, their triumphs, and their failures.
While I know this was only "inspired" by Ken Carter's story, I loved being able to put even a fictional personality to his character, and while it still seems just as fantastical, the story is just a bit more...shiny now.