Rain of Dragonflies
by Regine Haensel
Description
A collection of 14 short stories.
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Rights Information
World Rights Available
Marketing Information
One of the stories in this collection won a Saskatchewan Writers’ Guild Short Manuscript Award in 1990; another received an Honourable Mention in the Humour Category of these awards in the same year.
Reviews
Before reading a book, I wonder what new landscapes (internal and external) I’ll explore, what characters and situations I’ll be introduced to. With short stories, I’ve often found that those furthest from what I believe to be the writer’s personal experience are the most successful.
So it was with A Rain of Dragonflies, by Saskatoon’s Regine Haensel, a collection of fourteen short stories. The two that most captivated were “The Cage,” about a dumpster-diving recluse who cages a canary that’s flown into her two-room rooftop suite, and “Winter,” about a flowerchild-turned-teacher who picks up an elderly female hitchhiker during a “near blizzard,” and has her perceptions challenged. Many (if not most) writers do use “seeds” from their lives as inspiration, even when writing fiction. I don’t know how much of these particular stories was fabricated – Haensel did work as a teacher and lived in remote communities like the ones described in the book – but I do know that they really work.
Several characters are unsettled re: the way their lives have turned out, but unlike the rest, Aggie (from “The Cage”) doesn’t question her lot. “She had always accepted everything that went on around her, accepted it as the way of the world” and she “found ways to live within its limitations”. This story succeeds because Haensel never allows it to get sentimental. She portrays loneliness by having Aggie spend most of her days “listening to the cracked radio that only got local stations or looking at pictures in the tattered magazines that she collected.”
Aggie’s home decoration consists of magazine photos, her own drawings, and newspaper-clipped images of birds. She has a cracked plate and label-less tins in the cupboard, collects beer bottles, and is familiar with back alleys, where “garbage cans [spill] over with crumpled paper and old rags, boxes [smell] of rotting vegetables or wilted flowers”. These visceral details make the story credible, and the objective reportage of events allows readers to emotionally connect: we’re not being told what to feel, we’re allowed to experience it ourselves.
“Winter” succeeds because the writer first establishes how challenging Saskatchewan winters truly can be, ie “one snowfall leads to another and has to be shoveled out in the morning and sometimes again when you get home at night.” It also lasts “six months if you’re lucky, closer to seven if you’re not.” There’s a quilt in the truck because its heater doesn’t work well. (Been there).The teacher\narrator is begrudging winter and “the settled life” she’s fallen into when the hitchhiking woman appears. The teacher remembers her own days of hitchhiking – and freedom – and experiences a rainbow of emotions, including pity, and incredulity that her aged guest is bound for Winnipeg, five hundred miles hence. Where do both women belong? Suddenly, the teacher’s life doesn’t seem so glum.
Parents … spouses … a werewolf. Many characters in these fine stories have their eyes opened in one way or another; my bet is that most readers will experience the same.
Author Biography
Regine Haensel’s short stories and nonfiction have appeared in magazines (e.g. Grain, NeWest Review) and anthologies (e.g. More Saskatchewan Gold, The Old Dance, Sky High: Stories from Saskatchewan) and been broadcast on CBC Radio (Ambience, SoundXchange).
Regine was born in Germany and came to Canada in the1950’s. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in English as well as a Diploma in Education from the University of Saskatchewan.
Regine attended creative writing courses at the Summer School of the Arts, Fort San in
the 1980’s and various other writing workshops. She has worked as a waitress, teacher,
adverting copywriter, and arts administrator. Regine is a past president and board member of the Saskatchewan Writers Guild, a former board member of the Canadian Conference of the Arts, and a past board member of SaskBooks (Saskatchewan Publishers Group). Her short stories and nonfiction articles have appeared in anthologies,
magazines, and been broadcast on CBC Radio Saskatchewan.
She lives in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. To connect with Regine: Facebook -
Regine Haensel writer; Twitter - @RegineHaensel; Blog – serimuse.blogspot.ca; TikTok
- @reginehaensel
SaskBooks
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View all titlesBibliographic Information
- ISBN/Identifier 9780993903205
- Publish StatusPublished
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