With her third novel, Mean Boy, Lynn Coady takes several risks that leave the reader wondering: is this just another solidly crafted book — or might it qualify as something more substantial? My ambivalence on this point stems from the nature of the risks she takes.
The first is the novel's subject matter — poetry. Coady tells the story of a young man, Lawrence (Larry) Campbell, from rural Prince Edward Island working-class roots, who aspires to be a poet and so crosses the Northumberland Straight to attend a small mainland university, drawn there by the Big Name Poet, Jim Arsenault. We sit in on poetry workshops and readings where students evaluate one another's work, sometimes nasty, sometimes clueless, most often hungover. Is the poetry banal? Is it pretentious? Could it hold the kernel of an emerging talent? Who's to say? How can anyone really be sure?
Just as the students engage in back-stabbing and petty jealousies, so too their mentors. Rural Jim Arsenault bears a long-standing grudge against urban Derrick Schofield and this rivalry has worked its way into nasty reviews of one another's work. Do the reviews contain any legitimate observations? Or do they merely reflect the clash of strong personalities? In the end, all this writing about writing acts as a tacit invitation for the reader to scrutinize Coady's work in the same way. Is the novel banal? Is it pretentious? Could it hold the kernel of an emerging talent? At the very least, one must say of Coady that she has confidence when she openly invites such scrutiny.
The second of Coady's risks is her decision to tell the story from the point of view of a young man. It is always a challenge to write a character of the opposite gender. The novel offers many reasons for a female telling. Set in 1975, there are hints of tension between feminist murmurings on campus and the patriarchal world view that dominates the university's rural setting. There is the older cousin, Janet, a senior on the same campus who spends all her time with a cabal of feminists and eventually announces that she is pregnant. And lurking in the background, but no less eccentric than their husbands, are the wives of the poets and the academics. Still, Coady chooses to follow Larry through his initiation into the life of the poet. He has a thing (only in his mind) for the waitress at the local diner, and he gets a hard-on when he sits near the secretary to the head of the English Department — convincing stuff for a writer who has never had one personally.








Article comments
1 - Natalie Bennett
This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States. Nice work!