Catching
Up With “Canada’s Charles Bukowski”
The Dirt On Author
Matthew Firth
>>BY
Nathaniel G. Moore>>PICS
by Andrea Firth
Matthew Firth is a Canadian fiction
author, father, and occasional hockey player.
But that is just the press release talking. He
is the author of two previous books of fiction,
which we’ll get into later. His latest book,
Suburban Pornography, just came out with
Vancouver’s Anvil Press, a publishing experience
Firth claims was “as smooth as just Zambonied-ice.”
I caught up with Firth to discuss his new book,
the writing life and other calamities. Originally,
as most writers have experienced I’m sure,
Firth thought the book would never get published.
According to the author, individually, the stories
have been rejected by countless magazines and
journals and anthologies.
“Sometimes I needed to go lie down for a
while after spewing these stories out. But then
again, not that odd. I switch gears quickly from
one part of my life to another,” Firth muses
from his home in Canada’s capital city of
Ottawa. Between shitty day jobs and “changing
shitty diapers,” Firth wrote these stories
over the last four years.
Recently at The Danforth Review, Michael
Bryson said Firth “takes a starker stance
than others; [his] narratives of Canadian inner-city
dwellers, low-end job workers and drifting men
are darker, harder, perhaps more perverse or at
least more directly sexualized than arguably any
other fiction in Canadian history.”
I asked Firth if he thought that men and women
approached writing about sex in different manners: “Not
sure it’s this cut and dry, this easily
compartmentalized. There’s enough variety
among and between men and women and how they write
about sex and love that the spectrum or flavors
of writing is quite broad. It’s sort of
like how we like to have sex: again, broad spectrums.
He likes it this way; she likes it that way. He
likes it missionary position once a week with
the lights out, she likes to dress him up like
a pony, lead him around by the bit and kick his
furry ass. And everything in between. I don’t
want to generalize based on gender. It’s
not a wise thing to do, plus I don’t think
it’s possible.”
And how well does Mr. Firth know his readers?
Does he “get” his audience? Do they
“get” him? Does he care?
“I’ve been at this a while now. I’ve
learned my readership is broader — in terms
of who they are, what they do for a living, where
they come from and live and all of that —
than you might think. Old ladies read my books.
So do young urban hipsters. And factory workers.
And people in between. Not in the thousands, mind
you, but still, the variety is greater than you
might assume. They’re drawn to something,
but what that ‘something’ is I don’t
know.”
When compared to the UK or US markets, the Canadian
publishing market is extremely small. But Firth
feels like things are getting a little bit better
for the small presses — “But the mainstream
book-buying culture still doesn’t see the
big picture. It’s opening up a little, but
anyone writing outside of the mainstream is marginalized
to micro and small presses. Ninety-nine percent
of Canadian lit is boring, middle class, academically-biased
drivel. It is safe, mainstream, inoffensive, comfy,
and, in the end, always well resolved so that
no doubt could possibly linger. It’s predictable.
It’s riddled with institutional problems.
I refer to ‘CanLit’ as the Ministry
of Literature — feeding the middle class
reading public palatable prose to keep them steady
and grinning throughout their workday and quiet
evenings, nothing more. It’s like lawn care:
an opiate for the masses, except it’s not
the masses, it’s just the middle class,
book-buying, CBC-radio-listening public.”
When asked to name Canadian authors he thought
were doing something that people should pay attention
to, Firth mentions Tony Burgess, Dereke McCormack,
Sal Difalco, Clint Burnham, Charles Tidler, and
Chandra Mayor as being “raw and adventurous
writers.” But again, these are writers who
are by-and-large marginalized to small and micro
presses, “so readers really have to search
out this type of fiction because you won’t
find it stacked high or faced-out at Chapters.”
Firth’s first book was Fresh Meat
in 1997. “I wasn’t thinking much about
any of it back then. I was surprised to have a
book. I fondled it, then looked at the picture
of the nearly naked babe on the back cover masturbating
and thought, hmmm, what’s mom going to say
about that? That sort of stuff. The launch of
that book was a blast. There was almost a fight
between a friend of mine (who can really throw
‘em — was a renowned brawler in the
Senior A lacrosse loop in the late ‘80s)
and a drunk heckler who was pissed his local pub
was being invaded by semi-literary arseholes.
Can’t blame him, really. Fresh Meat
got a bad review in the Toronto Star
but when I thought about that, about being reviewed
in a big, daily paper, I was shocked.”
Firth’s next book was Can You Take Me
There, Now? with Boheme Press: “My
expectations were higher. The stories were different,
longer, broader. And I changed the title from
Minimum Wage and Other Stories.
That was a big mistake, in retrospect. It had
something to do with the masturbating chick on
book one. I thought I should tone down the book
cover, change the title, go for something more
obscure. It was stupid of me.”
Beyond his own creative fiction landscape, Firth
has also been running a micropress for 13 years.
Black Bile Press publishes chapbooks such
as a small fiction sampling from Christina Decarie
called Nemesis Girls and the mainstay
literary rag “Front & Centre.”
Firth says it’s among his favorite accomplishments
in the literary world without receiving a cent
from “any silly government arts funding
agency.” Firth loathes writers who have
“a sense of entitlement, thinking someone
somewhere should prop up what they do. That’s
a sack of bourgeois, middle class rubbish.”
Firth’s dedication to the small press aesthetic
is admirable, and seems to be a good situation
for everyone. Firth has published writers he feels
wouldn’t necessarily otherwise get a shot.
“Within that micro press accomplishment
is publishing fiction from probably 100-plus writers
who might not otherwise have been given a chance
to see their stuff in print.”
Nathaniel G. Moore is the
Canadian author of Bowlbrawl (Conundrum,
2005). His next book is loosely based on his relationship
with the Roman poet Catullus, Let’s
Pretend We Never Met (Pedlar, 2007). For
more information visit www.notho.net
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