What the Crow Said tells the exuberant ribald, elemental tale of the citizens of a town somewhere on the weather-beaten border between Alberta and Saskatchewan.
After Vera Lang consorts with a swarm of bees, something changes in Big Indian. This prairie municipality-so remote from the rest of the world that its citizens aren't sure which province they live in-becomes somehow locked inside its own world of patience, yearning and willful struggle with nature.
Along the way, Big Indian emerges as a place simultaneously in the past and the present, the real and the imaginary, where a game of cards might last forever and a defeated farmer can freeze on his snowbound plow in June.
With his sun-sharpened imagery, unstoppable language play, and frank intimacy with the landscape, Robert Kroetsch creates in What the Crow Said a quintessentially prairie novel.
A new edition of the classic Canadian novel, What the Crow Said, a major work by one of western Canada's best-known and best-respected authors.
Robert Kroetsch was a Canadian novelist, poet, and non-fiction writer. He taught for many years at the University of Manitoba. Kroetsch spent multiple years in Vancouver, British Columbia before returning to Winnipeg where he continued to write. In 2004 he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada.
Sadly, I am apparently one of the last to learn that Canadian novelist (and author of one of my favourite novels, What the Crow Said) Robert Kroetsch died June 21, 2011. This novel was brilliant. I first read it for a Masters course in Magical Realism. It reminds me of a sort of Canadian One Hundred Years of Solitude. It also has one of the greatest first lines ever: "People, years later, blamed everything on the bees; it was the bees, they said, seducing Vera Lang, that started everything."
This book is weird, intelligent, and elaborate. The intro was dense and seemed to give away events in the book but I think it helped me understand and enjoy the actual novel to a greater degree. I appreciated the specifically Albertan/prairie imagery. The writing is quick and clever with potent imagery and analogies. I felt connected to characters and their extreme situations in a meaningful way. Overall I can see how reading this in a class setting would add depth to the intricacies of the writing but it was still an enjoyable read for me!
This is easily the weirdest book I've ever read. I just cannot wrap my head around this book, which is unfortunate because I love Kroetsch's other work, particularly his poetry. The low rating is not a mark against the book--I'm sure it's brilliant--but because I really did not enjoy this book. It's just completely over my head.
I'm a huge fan of magical realism, so for me this book was a pleasure. Reminds me of Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Isabelle Allende, only the story is so touchingly Canadian, set in a small town somewhere between Alberta and Saskatchewan.
Way too bizarre for me. I haven't read anything this odd since "The Double Hook", or even "Box Socials". After a while it got a little bit more compelling, however..... it's perhaps just too absurd for me. I prefer a straight ahead, direct narrative. Maybe some of the language (imagery, details) was too much...
The magical realist elements began to weigh the book down towards the end, almost making me nauseous with the excess detail. Can definitely tell Kroetsch was influenced by García Márquez. Strong reflections on the "war" between man and nature, and man's (not woman's, but man's) futile attempts to evade death.
I don't think I've read a book in which this many people have shat themselves. This book was supposed to be quite the Canadian comedy, but I just wasn't feeling it. It was very much ridiculous, but I didn't really laugh all that often. It's an interesting story full of interesting people at least, like Zike the Albino (who it doesn't count with). It was odd though. Very odd.
Adult content. A magic realist text I am still reading for a course. I'm having a hard time getting through this one. Although I enjoy most CanLit, I am looking forward to the end of my course so that I can read anything I want again!
This is a brilliant piece of artistry. What the Raven Said requires engagement of the brain -no question- but the fantastic world he creates, and the marvellous heroines (and bumbling heroes) are unforgettable.
One of the best books I've ever read, and that was before moving to Eastern MT. Very surreal, and a good reflection of northern plains small town madness.
A book not for everyone. I read to the back cover out of obstinacy. The strange thing is that another of his books. 'The man from the Creeks' was one of my favorites.