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An Audience of Chairs [Import] [Paperback]

Joan Clark (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

July 25, 2006
Like beauty, madness altered perception, but instead of offering illusion, it offered delusion. Moranna leaned the tricks madness played on perception the hard way as experience showed her how persuasively madness distorted reality. Experience also showed her that if she hung on long enough, the panic would subside and the delusions would pass. There were many dawns on the ferry when the sight of the ugly smoke stacks reassured her. They were proof that once again she had won the showdown with the voice and had delivered herself to the dawn, wholly alive. (p. 286)

Joan Clark’s An Audience of Chairs opens with Moranna MacKenzie living alone in her ancestral Cape Breton farmhouse, waging a war with the symptoms of bipolar disorder and grieving the loss of her two daughters, taken from her over thirty years previously. There are few people remaining in her life, as Moranna cannot help but tax the patience of nearly everyone she encounters. Her long-suffering brother Murdoch has her best interests at heart, though he is fatigued by her enormous needs and pressured by his ambitious wife to invest less time in her. Pastor Andy politely sloughs off the peculiarly intelligent yet unpalatable sermons Moranna pens for him. Her neighbour Lottie knows what it is to be an eccentric and can be counted on to come through in a pinch. The local RCMP constabulary smooths over her legal scrapes. And her lover Bun, who lives with her when not working on the ferries between Cape Breton and Newfoundland, knows how to give her a wide berth on her “foul weather” days. Thanks to the assistance of these sometimes reluctant guardian angels, as well as to the carefully planned inheritance left by her father (not to mention her own sheer ingenuity), Moranna has managed to get by all these years despite small-town gossips and tormenting youths.

Through a series of flashbacks, we learn more about the devastating effects of Moranna’s mental illness on her life and that of her family. But An Audience of Chairs also gives us a glimpse into the mind of a true iconoclast and wild spirit, who has managed despite overwhelming odds to keep hope alive.

In her early years, Moranna’s accomplishments and beauty, along with the protection of a father who saw glimmers of his suicidal wife in his beloved daughter, allow her to struggle through childhood and adolescence in Sydney Mines relatively unscathed. She is a gifted pianist, a magazine covergirl, and a promising actress when she makes a brilliant marriage to an up-and-coming young journalist, Duncan. But she soon finds herself unmoored by motherhood, and the oddities that the people in her life have always chosen to overlook become more difficult to disguise with drama and wit when maternal expectations are placed upon her. Her staged life comes crashing down around her ears when she is left alone with her daughters and in a manic artistic phase risks their lives terribly. Her family can no longer explain away her eccentricities, her husband forsakes her, and she is institutionalized, her children taken from her forever.

No longer playing the roles of perfect daughter, wife and mother, the devastated Moranna falteringly gropes for purpose in her life. She returns to the inherited Baddeck farmhouse and, inspired by a vision she has of her great-aunt Hettie, whose stories of their Scottish ancestors once filled the youthful Moranna’s imagination with stories of valour, earns a small income as a woodcarver. She carves for tourist sales the courageous and larger-than-life people of her clan, to whose histories she clings in order to reinforce her belief in her pedigree as a lionheart, so much more comforting than the spectre of madness lurking in her maternal lineage.

She enthralls the audiences in her mind – in reality an audience of chairs – with daily virtuoso performances on the piano board, a silent keyboard upon which she does battle with her demons through the music of Chopin and Rachmaninov.

Through these and other ingenious – and often hilarious – strategies, Moranna has over the years constructed a life of delicate balance, all of which is jeopardized one day by a glimpse of television. Visiting town with Bun, she is astonished to see her now-grown daughter Bonnie being interviewed for a local station about a climatalogical lecture she is to give, to be soon followed by her wedding in Halifax. Moranna knows she must make what will certainly be a surprise appearance at the wedding. But this means a high-stakes gamble with everything she has–her pride, her precarious mental health, her hope for a measure of grace in the world.

Of An Audience of Chairs, Quill and Quire said: “Elegantly written and deeply grounded in place, this moving, compassionate novel is far more than a story of mental illness. Moranna’s quest is for peace, joy, and connection–the same yearnings that drive us all.”


From the Hardcover edition.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“Joan Clark dares to write about those who live with a disability that is not physically manifest, but makes of life a labyrinth of potential disasters. Her risk is our benefit — if we only have the wit to live as intensely as Moranna lives. And as William Cowper has it, ‘there is a pleasure in madness’ that we all might wish to know.”
—Aritha van Herk, The Globe and Mail

“Elegantly written and deeply grounded in place, this moving, compassionate novel is far more than a story of mental illness. Moranna’s quest is for peace, joy, and connection — the same yearnings that drive us all.”
Quill & Quire

“Curl up in your favourite wingback for An Audience of Chairs. Clark, who excels at bringing wilful female characters to life, had me hooked on the first page with her plea to my imagination. . . . Readers are kept on knife’s edge.”
The Daily News (Halifax)

“Heartbreaking and satisfying at the same time. An Audience of Chairs is a brilliant achievement, one that deserves a huge audience of its own.”
Edmonton Journal

“A rich and rewarding novel.”
The Sun Times (Owen Sound)

“Clark’s portrait of this intense and complex woman is empathetic, sensitive and credible, and without a trace of condescension. . . . A deeply felt lesson not only in what it means to be human but also in what it means to experience compassion for others.”
Toronto Star

Praise for Latitudes of Melt:

A New York Times Notable Book

Nominated for the international IMPAC Dublin Literary Award

Nominated for the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize, Caribbean and Canada Region

"[Latitudes of Melt] has wonderful moments of clarity and transcendence, but never loses sight of what an ordinary life is."
—Carol Shields

"Mesmerizing. . . The novel casts a cumulative spell of ancestral continuity that is deeply and subtly true to life."
The New York Times

"Latitudes of Melt is a magical novel that takes us on a magical journey to places most can explore only by reading about them."
Ottawa Citizen

"Joan Clark evokes the profound sense of place we associate with the best Canadian writing. Absorbing and thick with detail. . . as rich and sustaining as a figgy duff."
The Gazette (Montreal)

About the Author

Joan Clark is the author of the novels Latitudes of Melt, The Victory of Geraldine Gull and Eiriksdottir, as well as two short story collections and several award-winning novels for young adults. Born and raised in Nova Scotia, she has lived in various places across Canada with her geotechnical engineer husband Jack. While living in Calgary she became a founding member of the Alberta Writers Guild and co-founded the acclaimed literary journal Dandelion. She now lives in St. John’s, Newfoundland.

Clark notes that the idea for An Audience of Chairs came in part from her own familial legacy of depression, with which she struggled at one time and which led a grandmother to suicide. “One of the things I was interested in was exploring the idea of family pride, which was abundant in my family. So much pride, in fact, that many of them refused to admit that their grandmother had committed suicide.” Clark made two false starts at writing this novel, the first time 30 years ago. “When I picked up the novel for the third time four years ago, I was surprised that I was able to indulge my sense of humour, to let go and have fun. Once the humour kicked in, I was off and running.”

Clark wrote her first published novel as a young stay-at-home mother, writing in longhand during her infant son’s naptimes. “I had never written fiction before and was amazed that I had been walking around without knowing that there was a story inside my head. That joy of discovery has kept me writing ever since.”


From the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Vintage Canada (July 25, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0676976565
  • ISBN-13: 978-0676976564
  • Product Dimensions: 5.2 x 1 x 8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,121,250 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not an accurate portrayal of bipolar disorder, September 1, 2007
This review is from: An Audience of Chairs (Paperback)
The main character in Joan Clark's novel "An Audience of Chairs" is a woman with bipolar disorder. I have been looking for novels with main characters who have bipolar. Unfortunately in Clark's book I did not find anything remotely resembling bipolar disorder. The author does not have a good enough understanding of bipolar disorder to represent it realistically. She did do research on bipolar for the novel but she really missed the boat.

Clark's main character, Moranna, comes across as someone who's quirky and eccentric. She doesn't own a telephone; she gets into long drawn out arguments with the staff at the local grocery store; etc, etc. She is difficult to deal with; she doesn't blend into society nor does she seem to want to make any effort to do so. Moranna has problems to be sure but whatever she has it's not bipolar. The final scene of the book in particular stood out for me. Moranna is wearing a costume and as she sees someone pulling into her driveway she takes off the costume and puts it away. That passage pretty much summed up the problem with the whole book. Clark gives the reader the impression that bipolar disorder is something you can simply tuck away in a box when need be. Moranna sheds her costume and everything's fine. If only bipolar were that easy to deal with.

If you know someone that struggles with bipolar disorder and want to read a novel that gives a realistic portrayal of mania and depression you should check out "Beyond the Glass" by Antonia White. I think the difference between the two novels lies in the fact that White suffered from bipolar disorder and Clark does not. White gives an excellent account of the horrors of mania. Perhaps someone who doesn't have bipolar can't write a clear, realistic portrayal of what's it like to struggle with the disorder. Of course I can't fault Clark for not having bipolar! I think it is commendable that she wanted to tackle such a difficult subject. However, I think there are already so many misconceptions about bipolar disorder and I think this book simply adds to the long list of misconceptions. I am still searching for novels with characters who have bipolar disorder if anyone's got any suggestions for me.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Finding Hope in the Ruins, September 23, 2005
By 
This review is from: An Audience of Chairs (Hardcover)
Moranna is called Mad Mory in her hometown of Baddeck, Nova Scotia. Set in a landscape that is untamed, Mad Mory emulates that wildness in her personality, besot by mental illness. Moranna is an unforgettable character, a passionate actress, a singer with perfect pitch and a young bride consumed with visions of grandeur. As the book progresses, the reader learns that Moranna has lost her two young daughters and this has catapulted her headlong into a depression that engulfs and guides her life. When a chance encounter via the television brings one of her daughters back into her life, Moranna's burdens are lightened and she finds new direction. This is a powerful foray into one woman's mind and tackles a tough subject in our society today. Yet, this book is full of hope and forgiveness and challenges readers to examine their own relationships with family and friends.
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5.0 out of 5 stars An incredible book., September 30, 2007
This review is from: An Audience of Chairs (Paperback)
Joan Clark's book 'An Audience of Chairs' is one of the best books I've read this year, and accurately shows us the world of bi-polar with psychosis disorder, and the path of destruction that touches the lives of all involved.

Moranna is a quirky, intelligent woman, married to an affluent man and has two small children. Her Bipolar disorder results in the loss of her marriage, her children, and mostly, herself.

It is an inspirational story of how she learns to identify her 'trigger's, and by allowing herself to become her own person, an artist, a happy non-conformist who finds love with a man outside her social class, she comes to terms with her disease and realizes that her strength of character will see her through. I especially liked how she stood up to physicians who wanted to break her spirit, as if doing so, some type of miracle would occur.

Clark's writing is lovely, poetic, vulnerable. A gifted storyteller! I read the book in two sittings. And what a fitting title.

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