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Ghost Pine: All Stories True

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Ghost Pine: All Stories True offers thirteen years worth of sparkling true stories from the life of author Jeff Miller, compiling the best of his long-running zine. From his youth in suburban Ottawa in the late 1990s, to travels across Canada and North America and his current home in Montreal, Miller's stories are equal measures funny and sad, nostalgic and unsentimental, punk rock and grandparents.

248 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2010

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About the author

Jeff Miller

186 books13 followers
Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Vicki.
334 reviews159 followers
August 2, 2011
Are there names we hold sacred in the CanLit canon, that must always stand alone? With all genuine and due respect, would it be profane to, say, utter anyone's name in the same breath as the name of Alice Munro ... especially if that writer has "punk" and "zine" in his literary curriculum vitae? If it is, what follows is a profane review ...

Ghost Pine: All Stories True offers up "all stories true" from the life of author Jeff Miller, covering 13 years from the 1990s to almost the present. The stories are compiled from the best of his long-running zine of the same name. The stories capture Miller's youth in suburban Ottawa in the late 1990s, to his largely economy class travels across Canada and North America, to his current home in Montreal.

Miller's bleak or just bland urban and suburban settings are gritty and seemingly hard-edged at first, but as the stories progress (and sometimes that progress is charted over mere words, sentences, perhaps a paragraph), most are redeemed by consideration, keen observation, kindness and often inexplicable optimism. What in the world could that possibly have in common with Alice Munro's oeuvre, where rural and small town settings often belie heartbreak, malice and even menace under a picture postcard, pastoral surface? Both are subversive, in their way, for so clearly undermining what the carefully crafted surfaces - semi-rural southwestern Ontario in Munro's case, downtown or suburban Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Winnipeg, Edmonton et al in Miller's case - would seem to depict. Both imbue their settings and characters with quiet, almost mundane solidity, but, *because* they're quiet, modest and mundane, are therefore profoundly authentic situations and people with which we can relate.

Miller's bike couriers, security guards, struggling musicians and artists, mildly and sheepishly disaffected high school students, not to mention the person and persona of Miller himself (because all of his stories are true, remember) might seem depressed, unmotivated, ready to wreak havoc or to just give up. But they all keep going in one fashion or another and they all strive to learn and expand their horizons beyond their immediate circumstances and experiences, best illustrated by the centrepiece set of stories and fragments about "The Social Justice Club", where a loosely assembled group of misfits strives to find a cause or purpose beyond their day-to-day high school routines. Just as it is charmingly surprising to see these teenagers struggling to understand the issues associated with East Timor or Burma, or the value of becoming a vegetarian, it is almost startling and simultaneously heartwarming to observe a young person ungrudgingly helping his wheelchair-bound grandfather to the bathroom, and then listening not only patiently but with fresh appreciation to an oft-told reminiscence.

"I laughed, not with the childish glee I did the first time I heard the story many years before. But today it was actually kind of funny.

My grandfather wiped a tear of joy from his eye."

The all true Ghost Pine stories have the intimacy of a handwritten, manually cut and pasted, collated and assembled publication - as they should. That homemade aesthetic does not, however, suggest that there is any compromise in sophistication in the storytelling. That's again where I think the Alice Munro comparison is sound. Miller's Ghost Pine stories have the same finely honed care and craft as Munro's plainspoken words of bottomless depth and possibility. Both speak simply and resonantly of familiar people, locales and experiences, even though they are widely divergent on the surface.
Profile Image for Marta.
Author 3 books11 followers
September 13, 2011
Crisp, clean and honest writing, reflecting and recording experiences from angry adolescence to young adulthood, in many familiar Canadian settings. Collected from 13 years of writing his zine, I appreciated Miller's choice to not put the stories together chronologically, but rather group them by theme or feeling.

( I saw Jeff Miller read at This Ain't the Rosedale Library, one of Toronto's best and now gone indie bookstores. The store had already been locked out by the rent-raising landlords, but about 20 people met anyway on the stone patio in front and listened to Jeff (and others) read. It was end of summer, that melancholy feeling. )
Profile Image for Doug.
268 reviews8 followers
March 6, 2015
I found out about Ghost Pine back when it was still called Otaku because it was recommended by a pen pal I met via zine trades. She makes an appearance in this book, which I just read in her hometown. That's the sort of closing the circle, small world experience that I've always loved about zines.

Jeff Miller always had a way of making the stories of his life, his city, and his family seem more meaningful than just some things that happened to one person among many. He has a knack for finding common truths and suggesting them, rather than bludgeoning the reader with them.
Profile Image for Julian.
64 reviews6 followers
December 16, 2010
It's weird to write about someone's book who's a decent friend of yours. This book brought back memories of reading Jeff's zine at various life stages in the past 10 years, so it was pretty intense to read. I think Jeff is a great writer and he brings to life the world around him so well. I could go on forever about this book, but I'll leave it at that for the internet.
Profile Image for Nicole .
141 reviews8 followers
September 25, 2010
This made me want to dredge up memories of my own awkward teen and idealistic early twenties. I wish I could write about them with the same fondness and humour Jeff Miller brings to the stories in Ghost Pine.
Profile Image for Jess Gro.
14 reviews
August 21, 2011
read it in one day at the cottage. easy to slurp up but more fun to read as zines.
the reviews are in the vein of hornby in the believer. satisfying review reading.
also like the social justice club triology.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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