This versatile collection-at times darkly playful, absurd, or shockingly real-illustrates how we can fail to understand the simplest of truths and how we are trapped by the peculiarities of our own points of view.
In Gaston's hands, the outlandish becomes comprehensible and everyday life begins to look strange. What unifies these stories and their characters is the underlying faith in the humanity of even the most dangerously misguided among us.
Brazenly entertaining, but just as often heartbreaking, Juliet Was a Surprise portrays the humour and unfairness of life through the blunders of quixotic men and women with whom we can't help but sympathize.
Autorentext
Bill Gaston's most recent short-story collection Gargoyles was nominated for the Governor General's Award, and won the ReLit Award and the City of Victoria Butler Prize. His previous collection, Mount Appetite, was a finalist for the Giller Prize. He was the inaugural recipient of the Timothy Findley Prize, awarded by the Writers' Trust of Canada. His latest novel, The World, won the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize. Gaston's fiction has also won the CBC Literary Prize, the National Magazine Award, and has frequently appeared in Best Canadian Stories. He lives in Victoria.