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Story House [Import] [Paperback]

Timothy Taylor (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 20, 2007
In his first novel, Stanley Park, Taylor brought readers into the inner workings of the Vancouver culinary scene, writing evocatively about everything from divine local ingredients to kitchen politics. In Story House, he takes on the rarefied world of architectural design – with some boxing, fishing and reality TV thrown in.

Graham and Elliot Gordon are half-brothers, six months apart, the only sons of Packer Gordon, a famous architect. Graham is the natural son of Packer and his wife. Elliot is the product of Packer’s dalliance with a mistress. The boys are openly hostile towards each other, always have been, and when they reach their mid-teens, Packer decides they will settle their differences in a boxing ring. He takes them to Pogey Nealon, a retired fighter who runs a gym out of the basement of his house on Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. There, after eight weeks of training, the brothers box three rounds that will change their lives forever, as their father watches it all from a distance far greater than ringside: through the lens of his Bolex camera.

Some twenty-odd years later, both Pogey and Packer are dead, and it comes to light that Pogey’s house – the scene of Graham and Elliot’s pivotal battle – was likely an early design of Packer Gordon. Now deserted, the boarded-up building is home only to decades-worth of Pogey’s papers and film reels, and a slow rot that eats away at the walls. Graham is an architect himself, gaining recognition not only for his last name but his own work; he’s recently separated from his wife Esther and at a loss for how to make things work. Elliot is an importer of counterfeit brand-name products who works out of an old hotel on Hastings, and is married to a beautiful woman named Deirdre who gave up architecture to raise their young twins. The brothers’ paths have only crossed twice in the intervening years, and for both, that was twice too many.

In spite of their differences, which have only been magnified over time, Graham and Elliot agree to cooperate in restoring the house at 55 Mary Street, with enthusiastic help from the producer of the hit reality TV show Unexpected Architecture. It’s a seemingly doomed venture, but will make for great television. And as the plans for preserving Packer Gordon’s legacy begin to come together, there’s not only a surprising amount of collaboration, but cautious optimism that they might just pull it off. Yet nobody is prepared for what actually takes place when the cameras roll.


From the Hardcover edition.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“Cities reflect the souls of their inhabitants, and nothing lays claim to the soul of a city more than a novel that uses it as a character…. Timothy Taylor does it right…. [He] knows Vancouver’s arteries and bones. His portraits of that spectacular city … are as complex and well-rounded as a Tolstoy character.”
Calgary Herald

“Taylor has a knack for imbuing his stories with lyric realism, unearthing beauty in the mundane and trivial…. Story House is never less than eminently readable.”
Winnipeg Free Press

“A writer with chops…. Story House is a mesmerizing novel, populated by strong, complex characters and driven by a multilayered plot that is both archetypal and completely original…. Although this is a serious work, there are short bursts of brilliantly funny writing that demand to be reread.… He clearly challenged himself to write a more complex novel than Stanley Park, and he succeeds in stunning fashion.”
The Vancouver Sun

"Taylor’s very good at conjuring vivid visuals, a talent played out in spades in the novel’s tragic final act. . . . Story House is a big, brainy novel. An ambitious project. . . . Taylor’s book [is] intelligently and solidly built."
The Globe and Mail

"Taylor is a master of the dramatic in medas res and abrupt transition. . . .tour de force writing. . . . Taylor harrows the house of the dead in gripping fashion; he deserves all his accolades, and then some."
National Post

"Story House reveals all of Taylor's hallmarks and strengths. No one writes about work with such attention to the minutiae. It's not merely getting the facts; Taylor enters the language and customs of distinct societies and reveals them with astonishing verisimilitude. He immerses readers in alien worlds. . . . Story House is a thrilling tour de force, a most impressive achievement of idea and implementation, of structure in service of function. It's architectural, really. And Timothy Taylor is one of very few writers who could have made it work so well."
Ottawa Citizen

Praise for Timothy Taylor:


“[Taylor is] one of the most graceful young stylists around… unflaggingly intelligent.”
Maclean’s

“Taylor writes with the wonder and joy of a kid who has had his nose pressed to the candy-store window and all of a sudden finds himself inside, with one cautious eye glancing back over his shoulder.”
Georgia Straight

“Taylor reminds me of Munro: an edgier, hipper version. He has the miniaturist’s eye for telling gestures and objects, and a magical ear for cryptic dialogues about ordinary things … It was said of James Joyce that he could create a character by describing the way he held an umbrella. Taylor has that talent …”
The Vancouver Sun

“Timothy Taylor is a major talent who continues to make his mark on the Canadian literary scene.”
Times Colonist (Victoria)

“Taylor is a fine prose craftsman.”
—Andre Mayer, eye Weekly

Praise for Stanley Park:
Stanley Park is an assured debut that stands well above many first novels. Taylor is a writer of undeniable talent who has proven himself adept at both the long and short form, and whose wave will no doubt reach the shores.”
—Stephen Finucan, Toronto Star

“Timothy Taylor writes straight, strong, unadorned prose ... Taylor is as good as the American novelist Jim Harrison when it comes to writing about textures and tangs, colours and sensations.”
Quill & Quire

Praise for Silent Cruise:
“An intriguing collection of short fiction [from] a master stylist … Taylor’s use of language is exact. He has a gift for choosing exactly the right word to express an idea or an emotion, giving his writing a feeling of strength and precision. Each character rings true, enabling the reader to become engrossed in the stories. Silent Cruise is excellent writing and enjoyably hypnotic.”
The Hamilton Spectator

“Taylor has an obvious gift for plots, one of the storytelling arts that is irresistibly alluring, but which has fallen somewhat into disuse among short-story writers. These are page-turners, with dramatic turns of events and ‘hidden stories’ that are revealed in surprising, trump-card endings … Taylor is blessed with a prodigious dramatic imagination … Nearly every story Taylor has published has been singled out for some prize or honour, and this first collection affirms that he is more than just lucky.”
The Globe and Mail

About the Author

Now recognized by both reviewers and readers as one of Canada’s prose masters, Timothy Taylor took a somewhat unexpected route in establishing his writing career. After completing an economics degree at the University of Alberta and an MBA at the Queen’s School of Business, Taylor worked for four years in commercial banking, during which time he arranged to transfer from Toronto to his childhood home of Vancouver, where he still lives. However, Taylor had known since he was a child that he wanted to write, so he made the decision to leave his job and try to make a go of it, establishing his own Pacific fisheries consulting practice in order to give his new freelance writing career some stability.

As Taylor mentioned in one interview, it was all part of the slow process of developing himself as an author: “It’s difficult to have serious writing ambitions and run your own business at the same time. Both pursuits deserve your full attention, but writing won’t return a living wage at the beginning, so there are some hard realities.” Yet Taylor also feels that his writing has benefited immensely from his work in other areas: “I needed exposure to people in different fields with problems and issues and objectives outside the world of writing. If I had tried to start a novel in my mid-20s after studying creative writing, I can’t imagine what I would have written about. I admire people who succeed this way and, recently, I’ve met quite a few.”

During this time, Taylor began writing his first novel, Stanley Park, and also worked on his short fiction, which began to be accepted by literary magazines. This turned out to be a valuable step for Taylor, as he began to feel a part of the literary community. As he said in one interview, “For me, literary magazines were really important to how I ended up making contact with anybody whatsoever. Because, I think, for beginning writers the only dialogue you have going on about your writing – where anybody will actually talk to you – is the letter exchange you have with lit mags … And that conversation – you writing and submitting, and them writing you back this letter – represents this small dialogue, and it’s the only one you’re having.” The time spent perfecting his short stories came to fruition when Taylor’s “Doves of Townsend” was awarded the Journey Prize (Canada’s equivalent of the O. Henry Award) in 2000. Remarkably, he had two other stories on the competition’s final shortlist that year, and was the first Canadian writer ever to have three short stories up for the prize and included in the Journey Prize Anthology.

The following year, Stanley Park was published as part of Knopf Canada’s New Face of Fiction program, to outstanding reviews. (It was at this point that Taylor was finally able to wrap up his consultancy business and write full time.) The novel follows a food artiste named Jeremy Papier into the inner sanctums of Vancouver’s culinary scene, and Jeremy’s father, an anthropologist who camps out in Stanley Park to study homelessness, into the city’s underbelly. As one reviewer commented, “Taylor may be on his way to becoming the head chef of Canadian Letters.” Stanley Park was shortlisted for the Giller Prize, the City of Vancouver Book Award, the Ethel Wilson Award and the Rogers Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize.

That novel was followed by Silent Cruise, a spectacular collection of short fiction, in 2002, and Story House in 2006. Today, Timothy Taylor continues to publish stories in Canada’s leading literary magazines, as well as writing travel, humour, arts and business pieces for various periodicals and writing for film.


From the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 464 pages
  • Publisher: Vintage Canada; First edition (February 20, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0676977650
  • ISBN-13: 978-0676977653
  • Product Dimensions: 7.9 x 5.1 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,829,420 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars ARGGGGGGGGHHHHH!!!, June 13, 2009
This review is from: Story House (Paperback)
Now that I've gotten that out of my system, let me say two things up front:

1) This *should* have been a 4-star review
2) I think Mr. Taylor is a helluva writer, with some tremendous novels in him...but this most certainly isn't one of them.

'Story House' was probably more of a labour for me to read than it was to write. (There's a ton of 'stuff' in there, all of requiring research and knowledge and scope.) Seriously; I couldn't wait to finish it, it was an absolute chore.

Now, I love intelligent writers. I love writers who have capability and energy and verve and a love of language and audacity and...and...

Mr. Taylor has all of these. But in this instance anyway, the one thing he's lacking is the storyteller's gift.

I didn't care about the story he was telling.
I didn't care about the characters within the story he was telling.
I certainly didn't care about the subject -architecture- and moreover, Mr. Taylor didn't seduce me into caring about it...or anything else in the novel.

I was *confounded* by 'Story House'. I was infuriated. I kept wishing the remaining pages would shrink to a scant few so I could be done with it.

There are portions that are illuminating. Lyrical. Playful. But they don't make for a good story, and they certainly don't make for a good read.

If I was being blunt (understand that I just finished the novel and I'm not a happy camper, not even remotely) I'd say it was an effing mess, and desperately needed editorial guidance. (As do most books I'm reading these days; funny, that...)

Next up is his début effort; I sure hope that its reading isn't as painful an effort for me to exert.
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Huff & puff, but you ain't gonna blow STORY HOUSE down, m'kay?..., December 26, 2006
This review is from: Story House (Hardcover)
As I gently placed this novel down at my bedside yesterday and sprinkled a pinch of twinkledust into my baby blues, the penultimate thought I'd had in before nodding off to Neverneverland was that rarely has a novel been as meticulously-researched as Double-T's STORY HOUSE. (I'm happy to report that I had pleasant dreams all night long, and I woke up refreshed and ready to tackle a new piece of fiction, preferrably one belonging to to this author). Oh yeah, the last thought I'd had before hitting the hay was whether I'd snugly closed my bottle of twinkledust. It's expensive, even off of eBay, and even if I pay in Canadian funds.

Alright.

Time for a little digression towards the specifics of this tome, folks. You've just GOT to love (said with heapful James Brown-ism) how this writer's done his homework.

Gadzooks! I'm totally shocked. I mean, there's not a single t nor i--uncrossed or undotted, respectively--in this here work to be found.

Not only was I entertained--yarn-like--throughout the 400 or so pages of this bookaroonie, I was also massively educated. If that doesn't garner an "edutainment" award from which Canadian Council funds that, then the category's gotta be redefined, okay?

In any event, Taylor, like a Talmudist, dips into the storybook trail mix of the entire architectural field in this one, folks. Not only has he evoked a sense of drama between his four or so protags (Graham, Elliott, Esther, Avi, etc.), my babies, but he's also managed to teach you a thing or four about how to build a home. Properly. Sturdily. Differently.

And punch this: several other little gemstones make an appearance inside these pages as well. Displaying a jack-of-all-trades flourish as Mr. Everyscribe, Tim Taylor unsheaths the mother of all skills in his STORY HOUSE, giving us a Pepsi-challenge-like taste test re: his bona fides on the film biz, Hollywood-style, slapdashing some TV savvy in there for good measure, even peppering us with a few on-set antics courtesy of the man called (Avi) Zweigler, ostensibly a Tamil gentleman (probably from Jaffna, or maybe he's Nigerian?), and very definitely against Tinsel Town type (tongue firmly dans la bouche here, kids).

In any event, mix this with a little gun-running shtick care of younger Gordon brother Elliott, some contraband tschotchkes and assorted swag, not to mention the Kung-Fu Hustle, and you've got the makings of a Giller Prize winner here, kids.

Gosh, my hands are getting all clammy just imagining shaking Governor-General Michaelle Jean's palm (gosh, Timmy, isn't she just a fox? Yum!).

What you'll love about STORY HOUSE is that it's not in any way a facile read. Rarely *are* the Canadian novels I enjoy reading. Mr. Taylor combines his characteristic authorly smarts and several whopping metric *tonnes* of style in this tasteful depiction of a Jacob-ian/Esau-ian family feud about who's got their hands deeper into daddy-o's inheritance cookie jar, and what they're willing to sacrifice of themselves, their comfort zones, and their reputations to attain it.

You're going to majorly dig STORY HOUSE's introductory segments, with its more pugilistic undertones, as deft as a left-right-left setup (or right-left-right if you're a southpaw like 3 out of 10 of our Czech women) for that "battle royale" sequence which takes place somewhere along the lines of this plot--but--PSYCHE!--if you think I'm telling you about it, you might as well wait for the next solar eclipse.

The magnificent thing about a writerly trifecta, as in the case of Mr. Taylor's SILENT CRUISE, STANLEY PARK, and now his STORY HOUSE, is that it goes to show you that our man's totally here to *stay.*

Not once, mesdames et messieurs, not twice, but three-times-a-w'ady, Timothy L. Taylor has shown that he can outpace the fillies, getting out there to rub two narrative sticks in constructing a smokin' hot bonfire. He puts firmly to rest that oft-bandied about saw about how the novel is in its death throes.

Nuh-(four-letter word)-uh.

When I read something this cute-as-a-button clever, I bow down in hosannahs of joy. Why, you query?

Well (and here's my very frank admission folks) it's because one day I hope to write as well as this. One day I just hope to be able to move a reader along as much of an emotional path from first page to the last as Tim did me.

I got to that final paragraph, read what needed to be read, and it stuck with me like crazy glue, long after I'd shut the hardcover.

Treat yourself to something more pensive after a kvetchy holiday season, folks. Something to take your mind off that debt servicing, that credit card fraud, plus the fact you're going to have to break into your kids' trust fund just to finance all those hi-tech whiz-bang purchases you thought looked like a wicked score way back in the middle of November--ages ago, in 21st-century speak.

STORY HOUSE is the House That Taylor Built. It's an abode you're going to want to dwell in, too. I already do.

Hand on the heart,
--ADM in Prague
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