Product Details
Blackouts

Blackouts
By Craig Boyko

List Price: CDN$ 29.99
Price: CDN$ 18.89 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $39. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca

2 new or used available from CDN$ 15.00

Average customer review:

Product Description

This exhilarating first book of fiction introduces Craig Boyko as a writer of astonishing range, inventiveness, and vision. Infused with a razor-sharp wit, Boyko’s stories illuminate those pivotal moments in every life when we discover how difficult it is to be true to ourselves — and to the people who think they know us best.

When a man grows tired of his outwardly comfortable life, a special “replacement program” allows him to go on — with one important difference. The promise of fame, immortality, and triple force fields enthralls a twelve-year-old when the boys in his neighbourhood vie for a coveted spot on an arcade game’s high-scores list. In a story set against the backdrop of Stalinist Russia, a seasoned political informant begins to question long-held beliefs after a series of charged encounters with a fallen aristocrat. When an elderly woman becomes convinced that traumas in her past lives are responsible for her ill health, her beleaguered husband is reluctantly pulled back into his own memories of their early life together. During the London Blitz, a professional skeptic attempts to refute the ESP experiments of a committed believer in the paranormal, only to have his own faith challenged by an unlikely source.

By turns humorous and elegiac, compassionate and intellectually playful, these stories lay bear the obsessions, longings, and frailties that define what it means to be human. With this audacious debut, Craig Boyko joins the front ranks of our most gifted and exciting young writers.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #231996 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-02-26
  • Released on: 2008-02-26
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 336 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
“Nothing short of astonishing. Blackouts is note-worthy not only for its ambition but its scope. . . . Within each of Boyko’s varied settings, his purview expands even further as his gifts for characterization and dialogue compress whole relationships — whole lives, even — into tight narrative packages. . . . Boyko’s not interested in exploring the contours of the same old garrison. And why should he be, when there’s so much else to see and he’s such a gifted guide?”
- The Walrus magazine

“Craig Boyko writes stories that will make your jaw drop and your heart swell. Blackouts is a knockout.” 
— Neil Smith

“Stunning. . . . Boyko [has an] unstoppable imagination. . . .”
- Globe and Mail

“Craig Boyko’s stories are seriously clever, and show a bold imagination. He writes with elegance, too.”
- Russell Smith

“Evidence of Boyko’s obvious talent can be found on virtually every page. His diversity of voice, subtle wit, loving attention to milieu, deft characterizations of individuals grappling with resentment: each of these elements shine throughout. . . . Blackouts marks an auspicious arrival.”
- Edmonton Journal

“Brilliant. . . . Boyko’s so good at love that his dialogue can feel like eavesdropping. . . . [Blackouts shows] uncommon verve, literary grace and emotional insight. This is a highly commendable book.”
- Vancouver Review

“Craig Boyko’s ‘OZY’ is funny, bittersweet, and very moving. . . . Boyko somehow manages to capture, celebrate, and mourn the passing of childhood and also to reflect upon the enigma of mortality. . . . The wisdom of this [story] is stirring and
irrefutable. . . .”
— David Bezmozgis, introduction to The Journey Prize Stories 19

“Stealthy, seductive. . . . A collection that in many ways — its combination of playfulness and seriousness, its capacity to surprise — can take its place in the company of Neil Smith’s Bang Crunch. . . . Blackouts will provide thought-fodder, not to mention good old-fashioned pleasure, for months. Oh, and if Blackouts were assessed a batting average, it would be somewhere around .800. That’s enough to win the title in most leagues.”
- Montreal Gazette

“Boyko writes with a sense of life experience beyond his 28 years. . . . Boyko excels at weaving a series of minor interactions between characters, bringing them to a tipping point between longing and obsession, love and hate, fact and fiction. . . .This collection will be enjoyed by those interested in intelligent, moving yet sometimes quirky tales. . . . Elegant and compelling short stories.”
- Winnipeg Free Press

“Keep your eye on this young Canadian talent.”
- Chatelaine

“[An] accomplished debut collection of short fiction. . . . Boyko’s range and playful versatility [is] impressive. . . . Boyko extends the implications of the term [blackouts] to fascinating psychological territory. . . . But what’s most enjoyable about many of these stories is a totally unexpected but entirely believable payoff. . . . An inventive writer who’s willing to try almost anything.”
- Toronto Star

About the Author
Craig Boyko’s stories have been nominated for the prestigious Journey Prize four times and published in many of Canada’s best literary magazines, including Grain Magazine, The Malahat Review, PRISM International, Descant, and The New Quarterly. Born and raised in Saskatchewan, Boyko received degrees in English and Psychology from the University of Calgary. He now lives in Victoria, British Columbia.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Problem of Pleasure

The first night they unpacked the stereo and the coffee maker. Their plan was to stay up all night and watch the sun come up, as she put it, over the slums where the little people lived.

They played tic-­tac-­toe on the balcony window with their saliva until she was convinced that two winning strategies inevitably resulted in a tie. They cleaned the glass with yellowing newspapers he found beneath the sink.

She took a shower and emerged with one towel draped around her body and another coiled in her hair. She had to look in the mirror to show him how it was done. He took a shower and put his dirty clothes back on.

They smoked the remainder of a rumpled joint that someone had shared with her at an audition for a chewing gum commercial. She stood on the sofa and delivered her one line with ecstatic glee, with slack-­jawed forgetfulness, with shock and revulsion, with Shakespearean gusto: What’s that taste? She ­hadn’t gotten the part.

He turned off the lights, crouched next to her on the sofa, and traced his index fingers down the ridge of her spine.

How many? he asked.

Two, she said. No, one. I ­don’t know. I have a stomache, she mumbled, making it one word. Too much coffee.

My head hurts, he said, as though by way of consolation.

Your head hearts?

My head hearts, he agreed.

He brought out his camera. She pressed the backs of her hands against her forehead histrionically, like an ingénue. When she reached for him, he stepped away, raised the camera to his eye, and said: Click.

She fell asleep soon after the sky began to turn blue. He ­didn’t wake her. Instead he made more coffee, turned off the stereo, and unpacked his computer from a box she’d labelled fragile.


They had a rule. They were not allowed to say “I love you too.”

He’d said it once, and she’d said, Ah — no. Not allowed.

What do you mean, “not allowed”?

Empty and/or automatic reciprocation not allowed.

Okay. I love you.

Maybe. Maybe so. But how do I know you’re not just saying it because it’s what I want to hear? Wait a few minutes and try again.

A few minutes later he said, Oh, by the way. It just so happens that I love you.

Sorry. Too soon. I saw it coming. You need to surprise me.

Or you ­won’t know that I mean it?


Her sister liked him. Her brother liked him. Her father liked him. Her mother loved him. Jen liked him. Marco liked him. Hélène said he was cute. Roger thought he was intelligent. Elle said he seemed a little shy — but charming, definitely charming. Nan claimed he had “nerd chic.” Janice liked him. Wynne liked him. Heather liked him.

Caryn liked him, or said she liked him. She teased him, jabbed him with her knuckles, mussed his hair, called him the Hemogoblin — all playfully, of course, all in good fun. Or was it?

Caryn had liked Anthony better. Anthony had been wild.

But it ­didn’t matter.


Riding home in the crowded, silent, creaking subway train, he made lists.

The colour of her hair when it’s drying.

The loose, wrinkly skin that appears at her elbows when she straightens her arms.

The way she intentionally bruises her apples before eating them, tap tap tapping them on the counter or tabletop.

The way she ­doesn’t turn around, like most people, to glare incredulously at the crack in the sidewalk she’s just stumbled over, but walks on, seemingly unaware of having stumbled at all.

Her fuzzy earlobes.

Her face.


She taught him how to cook, cut his own hair, buy pants, and play guitar.

He taught her how to get free cable, make mix CDs, register her own domain name, and operate Unix, which she referred to as Eunuchs.


Because she always wanted to come along, and because he could not refuse, sometimes he stayed late at work so that he could take his after-­dark walks alone, before going home.


On the phone to her sister he heard her say: No, I am still looking. It’s just that you have no idea how much time auditioning takes . . . Of course I ­don’t, you know how independent I am. But it’s not like he minds that I . . . You know, if everything you do is just the opposite of what Mom did, if everything’s just a knee-­jerk reaction to the old fashioned . . . It has nothing to do with feminism, Laura . . .

And then she softly closed the bedroom door.


Would you still love me if I was fat?

Yes, he said after a pause.

Would you still love me if I was ugly?

Of course.

Would you still love me if I was a hundred years old?

No question.

Would you still love me if I was five?

Would you still love me if I was a man?

If I ­couldn’t speak any English?

If I ­didn’t have any arms or legs?

If I was just a disembodied head?

If I was made out of cheese?

Absolutely.

All of the above?

You mean, would I still love you if you were an ugly fat boy’s head, made out of cheese?

Who ­couldn’t speak English.

He pretended to consider it. Then: Yes, he said bravely. Yes, I think I would. All of the above.

Would you still love me if I ­didn’t love you?


Customer Reviews

An Avro Part Choir5
With Blackouts, Craig Boyko has not found his voice: he's found thirty - each distinct, rich, and resonant. As one of the other fourteen people who've read Canadian literary journals with any regularity, I've run into Boyko's prose and looked forward to this volume for a larger dose. It does not disappoint. As a body of work these eleven stories brim with heart and head (both libidinous and otherwise - The Problem of Pleasure discomforts as much as it delights). An auspicious debut! 4.5 Stars.

The latest, greatest messiah of the short story3
We get a new wunderkid every two years or so here in Canada . . . remember Timothy Taylor? I guess this is Taylor 2.0, or Alice Munroe for the hemp shirt set. Why do only 14 people subscribe to CanLit journals, as the other reviewer commented? And why are the same people who write the reviews also the ones who judge the contests who also graduated from the same MFA programme? Seeing the pattern yet? Hmmm.

This collection is fine, being in turns generic (sci-fi substitute person story) and operatic (Stalinist learns to love life via classical music). Everyone says it's all incredibly inventive . . . I guess so, if you know many fourteen year olds who use phrases like 'textual condensation' in their convos.

The showpiece of this collection, the $10,000 Journey Prize winner 'OZY', is about video games and childhood . . . and, wait for it . . . wait for it . . . mortality and lost innocence. Did you ever see the /Seinfeld/ episode where George cooks up all kinds of schemes to preserve 'GLC' for posterity, that his 'Frogger' score should never fade away? Boyko ripped off that episode.


Wait for the softcover. Of course, like everything else that the Globe and Mail backscratchers praise, it's very very well crafted and workshopped. Bravo. If your goal in life is to be lauded by tiny journals from the Prairies, study Craig Boyko as he held an abbreviated Talmud in his hands. Boyko definitely know the prevalent aesthetic of our land as good as anyone out there -- which will guarantee a lot of appreciative fame, in the short term. Overall? Over time? Ahhh. Well, man, we can't produce a Kerouac out here in B.C., can we?

But I have been told repeatedly that this is short story genius. Which it surely must be, if everyone says so? Then I suggest everyone buy up as many 1st editions you can, b/c Boyko must be destined for Bookers and Nobels and all the rest of it? Well, that's what they keep telling us, right?

So why does his work push the limits of 'nobody cares'? People readily drop ten quid for anything touched by Seamus Heaney, right? Why, despite the overtime publicity industry (ooops, I mean 'reviews') which support Boyko, and others like him, failing to produce so few (if any) young writers of truly international capabilities? Japan can do it. Ireland can do it. Hey, even Iceland can do it . . . but Canada? Migrant tales of ghostly origins and bad accents of countries never encountered (see Boyko's version of 'Russia', qv).

What I don't get . . . and bear with me here . . . hit the brakes on your PRISM pride for a second . . . if this stuff is as brilliant as everyone says, why does hardly anyone plunk down the coin of the realm for it? Why does it attract so little attention abroad? Don't answer now . . . have a long think over a coffee for a while, maybe pick up Marquez's "Leaf Storm" and see just how far behind we are in terms of literary skill.

But forget what I said. This collection is brilliant. My eyes melt with jealousy, and my laptop does a dead cockroach impersonation in awe.