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For over three decades, Michelle Tocher has been writing and telling warm, poignant and humane stories, often from a woman’s perspective. She is author of the celebrated book How to Ride a Dragon: Women with Breast Cancer Tell Their Stories, and The Tower Princess, a Kirkus-starred memoir that reviewers have hailed as a “an uplifting, unconventional, and deeply imaginative remembrance.” She has also written a sonically rich audio play, The Departure Train, (www.thedeparturetrain.com), and she has created a website (www.wonderlit.com) that invites writers and lovers of fairy tales to explore their deep, personal and universal meanings. In addition to writing fiction and nonfiction with a mythic dimension, Michelle has had a long career in communications and storytelling. She founded Creative Premises, Ltd., a Toronto-based health communications company, and for ten years she produced books and films for many organizations and community leaders, including Canadian Pediatric Society, the Canadian Career Development Foundation, and the women scientists of Waterloo. In recent years, she has facilitated many courses on storytelling, writing, and imagination, and has served as an Artist in Residence for Gilda’s Club of Greater Toronto, and Casey House, a hospice and treatment center for people with HIV/AIDS. Michelle’s books, short films, as well as her audio play and fairy tale courses can be found by visiting: www.michelletocher.com

OUTSIDE THE BIG OAK DOORS Cover
FICTION & LITERATURE

OUTSIDE THE BIG OAK DOORS

BY

A girl attempts to survive her chaotic Canadian family in Tocher’s literary novel.

Alice Montgomery, the only daughter in a household with four kids, is bookish and probably the best adjusted of the lot—not that that’s saying much. Her mom, Maddy, moved their family to Calgary after Alice’s dad, Jon, died of a heart attack. Her oldest brother, Jeffrey, is a star athlete who messes up that stardom (and a lot of other things) due to his unresolved issues regarding his deceased father. He goes so far as to start using his mother’s maiden name, Duval. The middle brother, Charlie, is Maddy’s favorite; she claims he has “the gift of faith.” Charlie ping-pongs between delinquency and religiosity throughout his childhood, though he’s consistently friendless and conniving. The youngest is Zack. The secret about Zack is that he was adopted. The other secret about Zack—unknown even to Maddy—is that Zack is the love child of Jon and his co-worker at the bank. The ever beleaguered Maddy is a former artist forced to work two separate secretarial jobs in order to provide for her kids. She is finally pulling herself out of the spiral she fell into following her husband’s death. Then there’s Aunt Bel, Maddy’s outspoken older sister, who took the family in when they first arrived in Calgary. Bel and Maddy’s relationship has always been tempestuous. “I suppose Mama wouldn’t be herself without Bel flying in and out of her life on a broomstick, breaking Mama’s spirit and giving her a chronic case of nervous hysteria,” narrates Alice. “Still, family is family. When the chips were down, blood flowed to blood.” Together, this fractious unit must confront problems old and new, from Maddy’s return to dating and painting to the circumstances of Jon’s death and Zack’s parentage. In times of crisis, there’s always family…though that may not always be a good thing.

Tocher’s prose, in the mouth of Alice, is spry and unsparing; here she describes Aunt Bel’s indelicate impression of Alice’s grandmother’s sleeping sickness: “ ‘She looked like this.’ Bel stiffened her body and twisted it into a hideous shape. The newspaper slid to the floor. She screwed her jaw to one side and raised her arms up into air with her hands clawed as if they were about to attack. By the time she came out of her pose, I had fled in terror.” The novel, short at under 120 pages, is told in episodic chapters that tend to revolve around a single character or incident. The order isn’t chronological, but a portrait slowly emerges of the family and its dynamic. Alice provides a stable, sympathetic center to the narrative. A shrewd observer of the people around her, her quest to understand her father’s behavior and absence becomes an unexpected driving force in the book. The book’s brevity works in its favor. Tocher manages to pack a lot into her pages.

A slim but fulfilling novel in stories about the madness of families.

Pub Date:

Publisher: Manuscript

Review Posted Online: April 30, 2021

ADDITIONAL WORKS AVAILABLE

How to Ride a Dragon: Women with Breast Cancer Tell Their Stories

How to Ride a Dragon is a beautifully crafted tapestry of mythology, fantasy, narrative and first-hand human experience that tells the stories of 22 women, their families and friends, and their epic struggles coming to terms with cancer. In 1999, in a conversation with her friend Eleanor Nielsen at the Canadian Cancer Society, Michelle Tocher was inspired by Eleanor's dream to relate the experiences of survivors of breast cancer who had adopted the ancient Chinese ritual of dragon boating. That summer Michelle witnessed her first dragon boat race: six boats lined up at the starting line, occupied by women of every age, shape and size -- a colorful, happy crowd of ladies in pink -- the shoreline crowded with cheering spectators, many of them no longer able to race. Here the master storyteller found the people who could tell living stories about what it meant to meet and conquer dragons.
Published: Jan. 1, 2002
ISBN: 978-1552633977

The Tower Princess: A fairy tale lived

A wise, humorous, poignant memoir that shows how fairy tales can be healing. The author changes her narrative of chronic pain by delving into the story of Rapunzel. Reader beware: this is no Disney-escape fairy fluff. A marriage of personal and mythic storylines that reveals deep truths through mythic imagination and the perspective of fairy godmothers. A memoir filled with treasure we can all claim, especially in hard times.
Published: May 31, 2021
ISBN: 978-0973877601
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