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Fiction General

Don't Be Afraid

by (author) Steven Hayward

Publisher
Knopf Canada
Initial publish date
Jan 2011
Category
General
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780676977363
    Publish Date
    Jan 2011
    List Price
    $29.95
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780676977370
    Publish Date
    Feb 2012
    List Price
    $22.00

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Description

Hayward's darkly comic novel of adolescent anxiety reveals an unforgettable family caught in a state of mourning.

Meet Jim Morrison--not the lead singer of the Doors who died a rock 'n' roll death in 1971, but a chubby seventeen-year-old living in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, who was born days after the singer's death. Jim, or Jimmy, as most people call him, has been living a largely invisible life, overshadowed by his older brother, Mike, popular and charismatic, and his father, Fort, a stern and unyielding engineer. Jimmy spends his time avoiding gym, transforming his uneventful days into scenes from his favourite movies and occasionally going on banana diets (special banana carrier required).

But everything changes the night the library explodes, with pieces of books and catalogue cards falling like snow from the dark sky. Jimmy is first on the scene with his father and it's soon clear that Mike had been in the library when it exploded, possibly meeting a girlfriend after hours. Mike's death upends the Morrisons' suburban life and any sense of normalcy is destroyed. Their mother, Filomena, is nearly catatonic with shock, and Jimmy must become his much younger brother's nanny, taking him to preschool every day and uncomfortably hanging out with a gang of mothers, watching them breastfeed and talking about peanut allergies.

Life gets even more surreal. The cause of the library explosion remains mysterious, and Jimmy tries to help his father unofficially gather evidence at the site. Add to this his duties surrounding his mother's idea to have a birthday party for his dead brother, and Jimmy finds himself busier and, bizarrely, happier than he's ever been.

With generous humour and characteristic energy, Steven Hayward weaves a story of the undercurrents of family life and the unpredictable ways our paths can unfold.

About the author

Contributor Notes

Born and raised in Toronto, STEVEN HAYWARD currently teaches creative writing at Colorado College in Colorado Springs. A frequent contributor to the Globe and Mail and the Literary Review of Canada, his first novel, The Secret Mitzvah of Lucio Burke, won Italy's prestigious Premio Grinzane Cavour prize.

Excerpt: Don't Be Afraid (by (author) Steven Hayward)

JAMES FORTITUDE MORRISON
 
 
My full name is James Fortitude Morrison, but nobody calls me that. Instead, I’m Jimmy or Jim. And so this is what I tell people: ”I’m Jim Morrison of Cleveland Heights, Ohio.“ It’s a sort of joke, like saying I’m no one at all.
 
I tell people that because the other Jim Morrison—the one everyone’s heard of, the legendary lead singer of the Doors—was found dead in a hotel bathtub three days before I was born, on July 3rd, 1971. If news of his death wasn’t on the front page of every newspaper, it was close. It was on the radio everywhere, for sure. There was even one radio station in Tampa, Florida, that played ”Light My Fire“ over and over again for seventy-two hours. It wasn’t a planned thing. The disc jockey who happened to be there in the middle of the night when the news came in from Paris put on the song. When it was over, he put it on again. Then a third time, and a fourth. Soon other radio stations were doing the same thing. Three days later—when there was no choice but to accept that Jim Morrison had died and wasn’t coming back—they took it off. Changed the record.
 
Some stations played ”The End,“ which is another Doors song, but most played nothing at all. Just let the silence hang in the dead air. People started crying because it meant he was really gone. One of the nurses at the hospital when I was born told my mother James Morrison was the most beautiful name she had ever heard. ”You can call him Jim,“ she told my mother, and burst into tears. She was a Doors fan, probably.
 
I throw in the Ohio part because that’s what you do when you’re from Ohio. Watch the next time you see a kid from Ohio on TV. He’ll come out with it. Like there’d be some confusion. Like anyone cares. He’ll also maybe say USA, but that’s understandable. It’s one thing to come from a country that’s basically conquered the world; it’s another to come from some nowhere place in the middle of that country. If you’re from Ohio, you know the last thing you expect to see on TV is someone from Ohio. Except Paul Newman or Bob Hope. Or Steven Spielberg. Most of the time though, ordinary Ohio people have no business being on television and everyone from Ohio knows it.
 
Three days after the library exploded I was on television myself. Asking people if they’d seen my dead brother, Mike, if they knew where he was—that’s what I was supposed to say, anyway. There was a big cue card in front of me that had the whole thing written out in thick black letters. I found out later that it was already too late. But that was later. Right then I was supposed to be talking to Mike, too, telling him that if he was out there watching, he should just come home, to not be afraid, that if he wanted to come back it would be okay.
 
Maybe you saw me that night on television.
 
Maybe you even remember what I look like: seventeen, ordinary eyes and ordinary hair, a little on the heavy side. Not obese exactly, not the kind of kid who has to be airlifted out of his parents’ basement every time he goes to the dentist, but if some guy were to show you a picture of me and my dead brother Mike and say, ”That’s him, the fat brother,“ you’d know exactly which one of us he was talking about.
 
I call Mike my dead brother because he is, and so there won’t be any weirdness later. Otherwise there’d be this awkward moment when you’d have to nod and say how sorry you are, just like you’d have done if you’d been at the funeral home and had to stand there with me in front of Mike’s casket. I’d thank you for being sorry, and maybe you’d say it again, say how really sorry you were, but eventually you’d walk away, leaving me there while you took off somewhere else, anywhere else, relieved it’s not you in the middle of this, that it’s my dead brother in that coffin, not yours.
 
The library blew up all at once: a flaming geyser shooting up into a dark night. First there was a flash, followed by a blossom of flame, and then everything from inside the library—the tables and the chairs, the microfilm rolls of defunct newspapers, the old 16 mm films, the computers, the green carpet in the children’s section, the cassette tapes and the video cassettes, the Devhan Starway books, the old and the new record albums, the framed pictures of Pete Seeger and John F. Kennedy, the typewriters, the card catalogue, the telephones and paper clips, the due date stamps, the unused blank library cards, the staplers, the staples, the overdue notices in their stamped envelopes—all of it shot up into the night air.
 
Three days later the guy at the television station told me: ”First say who you are, then get into the whole missing person thing.“
 
I told him fine, and then he counted down.
 
The cops had given me a picture of my brother to hold up in front of the camera, a blown-up version of his yearbook photo. The weird thing about the photo was that the photographer had altered it, the way they do to take out zits and moles and anything strange. Except that instead of taking out a zit, the guy who touched up the picture took out the dimple in Mike’s chin, airbrushed it smooth, as if it were some kind of defect and not part of his bone structure. It wasn’t the first time I’d seen that picture, but I hadn’t noticed the airbrushing until I stood beside the magnified version of it in the super-bright light of the television studio. It made it seem like I was there to talk about a Mike who had changed in some mysterious way, a version of my brother who’d already crossed over to the other side, or a replicant, like in Blade Runner, some robot who looked a lot like him but who wasn’t him, and who I’d eventually have to kill. And the fact is at the time I sort of did want to kill him. I didn’t know what he was doing or why he was doing it—or why I was in the dark about it. But I said none of that. Instead, I held that photo up and started to talk.
 
”Ohio“ was as far as I got. It aired that night anyway. You can’t hear what I’m saying but you can see my lips moving. ”I’m Jim Morrison,“ I’m telling people, ”from Cleveland Heights, Ohio.“ Then I passed out, fell face first onto the floor of the television studio.

Editorial Reviews

A Globe and Mail Best Book

”Heartbreaking and hilarious in equal measure, . . . Don’t Be Afraid is a note-perfect account of life and loss. . . . [Hayward] deftly unleashes his inner Vonnegut.“
— John Barber, The Globe and Mail
 
”Hayward has an easy way with his prose and the dialogue. . . . Portrayed with realism and sympathy. . . . If you’re a fan of . . . Miriam Toews’ A Complicated Kindness or Reif Larsen’s The Selected Works of T. S. Spivet, you’ll likely enjoy this book.“
—Toronto Star

”A beautiful meditation on loss, grief and the stubborn resilience of families.“
— Nino Ricci, author of The Origin of Species
 
Don’t Be Afraid is an extraordinary novel, utterly compelling from the first page to the last. Portraying lovable characters in varying degrees of crisis, the novel is tender, wise and hilariously funny. Hayward is the fine and rare writer—like Richler in Solomon Gursky or Barney’s Version—who makes us laugh all the while illuminating with compassion and candour the truths of the human heart.“
— Timothy Taylor, author of Stanley Park
 
Don’t Be Afraid broke my heart in the very best way. That is, the funny/sad way. Indeed, Steven Hayward may just be the best funny/sad writer we have. Go on. Let him break your heart.“
— Andrew Pyper, author of The Killing Circle

”A hilarious and quietly subversive tour of post-industrial American suburban life. The fictional Jim Morrison in Don’t Be Afraid is more interesting than the real Jim Morrison ever was.“
— Stephen Marche, author of Raymond and Hannah

Don’t Be Afraid is an acutely smart and sensitive portrayal of a youth who is forced to confront the inexplicable death of a family member. Steven Hayward is an outstanding writer with a special talent for exploring the big existential questions through comic virtuosity and the artful rendering of voice.“
— David Chariandy, author of Soucouyant

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