Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2002-07, Page 45Sellers l../ou/)try ANIL It' Marsha Boulton Book Review Wrg words of wisdom from a rural writer Letters from the Country 1V Marsha Boulton Toronto: McArthur & Company, 2002 Softcover, 152 pgs., $14.95 Reviewed by Deborah Quaile Marsha Boulton is our mirror for rural foibles. Whether documenting the great interest of neighbours — almost like a coffee klatch, really — when the septic tank is being pumped out, or the "garbage Gestapo" that keeps folk on the straight and narrow, she accurately pinpoints country differences from big city life. Although the family farm is disappearing in favour of factory farms, and smog can be choking even out of town, urbanites still step forward with "a handful of seed catalogues and a composter," to accomplish their own version of pioneering and foster a feeling of irrepressible optimism in all. In Letters from the Country /V, Boulton tempts her readers with title tidbits such as "The Myotonic Goatherd," "Osama bin Cluckin Meets His Match," or "Wally Ballys." We hear about a nasty ram named Crash Test Dummy who butts the visiting neighbour in the derriere and then proceeds to commit patricide on his woolly dad. Exit Crash Test Dummy and enter Bucky. the small but plucky Rideau Arcott who proves to be a true Lothario. Soon afterward the Boulton fields are checkerboards of black and white sheep, or as she notes when they come running to her whistle, "a player piano keyboard on hooves." Moments like that make a woman want to run out and buy a spinning wheel. Small town news also proves to have inspired her scope for imagination, with some of the choicest articles included in the text Who can resist laughing at the Speeder of the Week or the nudes that parade their privates in front of unwary women? The stories of local endeavours, funerals and engagements are never as titillating as what flows from tongues in the coffee shops. Boulton admits to knowing about a steamy love affair between a politician and town clerk months before it hit the papers, but that is admittedly part of the charm of small town news — some of the best stuff is often ignored as long as possible, usually to save hurt feelings. As on any farm, there are poignant moments of pain, like the loss of stock that was a vibrant point of interest and pleasure around the homestead, or those who have become friends. But the interspersing of emotional highs and lows rounds out the tales nicely, and others become all the more humourous for it. Marsha Boulton writes with a clean, easy style, using a frankness that rests on readers' ears as if it could be coming from across the kitchen table over a cup of tea and cake. There is the lingering feeling, however, that the publishers completed this book in more haste than its predecessors. Each of the first three volumes ran over 200 pages, and had such niceties as artistic seasonal dividers between the arrangements of stories. This book had none, and was a slim 152 pages in length. Still, for Letters from the Country aficionados, the fourth book of the series is a welcome, humourous look at modem rural living.0 Deborah Quaile is a writer in Rockwood whose work is often found in small town newspapers. She recently published her first book. Mrs. Merrv's Memories, a collection of oral histories of rural life in the late 1800s/early 1900s. STABLING MANUFACTURER NEW STYLE FREESTALL • .125 wall tubing • 2 3/8 - pipe • Available in 74" & 84" long • Post or pipe mounted • Hot dipped galvanized We handle a full line of hog and dairy stabling Vandepas Welding R.R. 2 Kenilworth, ON 519-848-6537 JULY 2002 41