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C.C. Canning

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As a novelist and screenwriter C C Canning (Chris) draws on an early career that spanned advertising and journalism, corporate finance and the making of award winning wines, in a life spread across Europe, North America, Australia and New Zealand, providing him with a rich lode of experiences and locations to mine for his characters and their stories. He has been a full time novelist and screenwriter since 2013 and his current projects are aimed at an international market across the mediums of film, music and contemporary fiction.

Finding Albert Strange Cover
FICTION & LITERATURE

Finding Albert Strange

BY C.C. Canning • POSTED ON Feb. 7, 2013

A debut novel paints an intergenerational portrait of an Australian clan in crisis over one fateful day.

Set in the present day, the story focuses on the Saville family, living in a wealthy suburb north of Sydney. Roger, the patriarch, is an aggressive businessman set to make a profitable yet ethically unsound real estate deal against the reservations of his business partner, Lawrence Beck. One problem, though: Roger’s briefcase, holding some important documents, has vanished, and he must tackle the task of finding it while managing the many moving parts around his deal. Meanwhile his wife, Joanne, despite seemingly having it all, feels oddly empty, worried about the future though unsure of what exactly she should fear. Compounding this is the arrival of her father, the titular Albert Strange, who has come to reconnect with his daughter’s family and march with his 14-year-old granddaughter, Samantha, in the annual Anzac Day parade (“A bit like Independence Day in the States,” one character explains). It’s really more like Memorial Day: a remembrance of those who served in the military. Albert, a World War II veteran, left home when Joanne was young; she feels that time is running out to reconcile with her distant father. Willie, Joanne’s 17-year-old son who has not been home for months, starts his day in an unfamiliar apartment, trying to piece together the events of his drug-fueled night, and then ventures out into the city with two dubious friends. The narration alternates among the characters—Roger, Joanne, Lawrence, Albert, and Willie, mostly—and the storylines intersect and reflect upon one another in intriguing, thought-provoking ways. Canning’s characters are well-rounded and nuanced; although not always likable, they act realistically, and he constantly puts them in compelling situations. In addition to ace character work, the author inserts thoughtful digressions and conversations about war, memory, ethics, business, sexuality, and aging into his novel, making for an absorbing read with few slack moments. Canning’s only trip-ups occur when the action becomes too bogged down in business minutiae, but these are easy to overlook amid the overall quality of the book.

A family saga shines in its depiction of the oddities and inanities of real life and in its delving into the numerous concerns of each day.

Pub Date: Feb. 7, 2013

ISBN: 978-0-473-22130-0

Page count: 352pp

Publisher: CreateSpace

Review Posted Online: Oct. 19, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2016

Awards, Press & Interests

Day job

Writer

Favorite author

John Le Carre

Favorite book

The Importance of Living

Favorite line from a book

Sing like no-one's listening, love like you've never been hurt, dance like nobody's watching. and live like it's heaven on earth.

Favorite word

sceptical

Hometown

Auckland

Passion in life

Writing

Unexpected skill or talent

winemaking

ADDITIONAL WORKS AVAILABLE

BEDEVILED (A Song for Leonard Cohen)

A young singer/songwriter, obsessed with Leonard Cohen, is killed during an attempted mugging in NY in the mid Seventies with suspicion falling on the intended victim who, returning to NY 18 years later, has only the evidence buried in the lyrics of her songs to prove his innocence as corrupt police and unidentified accusers pursue him. A noir Thriller set in NY, intercut between the mid Seventies and the early Nineties, with original music written by Chris Canning and Eden Iris. Novel, screenplay and songbook.

Wild Life

A successful wildlife painter sets out to locate the source of a counterfeit copy of one of his paintings sold by a gallery in Vietnam and finds himself gathering evidence of non-governmental agencies hi-jacked for more sinister ends. Faced with the dilemma of unmasking truths that will put him in conflict with government and financial powers for whom he is no match, his own safety and the safety of those who are close to him is soon threatened. But what he learns is destined to put millions of lives in danger, not just his own.
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