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Girl Runner (2014)

by Carrie Snyder

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11310242,320 (3.68)23
"As a young runner, Aganetha Smart defied everyone's expectations to win a gold medal for Canada in the 1928 Olympics. It was a revolutionary victory, because this was the first Games in which women could compete in track events--and they did so despite opposition. But now Aganetha Smart is in a nursing home, and nobody realizes that the frail centenarian was once a bold pioneer"--Amazon.com.… (more)
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» See also 23 mentions

English (8)  French (1)  Spanish (1)  All languages (10)
Showing 1-5 of 8 (next | show all)
Un relato de cómo la vida pasa corriendo... ( )
  mirenbz | Jun 14, 2020 |
Proper review to follow after Book Club meeting. ( )
  rkcraig88 | Jul 15, 2019 |
I was unsure what to expect with this book. I chose it because in my youth I was a runner and the story premise intrigued me, unusual for a novel. It is fiction based on a real event. The key fictional character, the ‘girl runner’, is Aganetha Smart. She wins the gold medal at the 1928 Olympics for the ground-breaking Canadian team of female athletes. The historical setting is real and is a fascinating glimpse into the barriers which women faced in 1920s and 1930s Canada and society’s attitudes to the strength, ability and success of women.
But this novel is not just about athletics, it is the story of Aganetha’s life, of the child who liked to run and how a random chance allowed her to train with a running coach. Eventually she won her gold medal at the Amsterdam games. This is a book about the growth of a girl into a young woman, and from a young woman into an old one, lugging with her the memories, guilt and secrets of her childhood. Running colours Aganetha’s life, her character, and her approach to problems.
For Aganetha, running is everything. When feeling troubled as a child, she runs. When feeling trapped as an elderly woman, she pulls on her running shoes and goes out into the fresh air. Running is at the core of her character, but is she running to win, to be a champion, or to run away? When, in her forties, she is asked where she wants to be, she replies without hesitation, “running”.
We cannot understand Aganetha without the story of her family, she is the child of her father’s second marriage and so the home is full of step-siblings. Perhaps the novel would have benefitted from less siblings, sometimes too many characters can clutter the narrative and at times the story jumps around a bit in time. The detail in which the rural life of this family is told – with the mother who cares for distressed girls, and the father who builds a lighthouse in the field – reminded me of Jane Smiley and Anne Tyler.
At the end of the book we find the answer to a secret from Aganetha’s youth: this mystery is so subtly handled that I missed the first clues, so the solving of the mystery fell a little flat. There is also a second line of narrative involving two young people who arrived unannounced at Aganetha’s care home and take her back, in her wheelchair, to the country home where she grew up. For a long way through the book the relevance of this storyline was unclear, but it becomes clear at the end.
Read more of my book reviews at http://www.sandradanby.com/book-reviews-a-z/ ( )
  Sandradan1 | Oct 30, 2015 |
As a fan of Carrie Snyder's The Juliet Stories, I was wriggling in my seat over the mere idea of Girl Runner. But then the anxiety crept in: there would be no Juliet, and perhaps much of the magic was hers. Just as the same river can't be stepped in twice, an author cannot retell a favourite story.

And then Girl Runner was shortlisted for the 2014 Rogers Writers' Trust Award, a nod which increased my excitement and my anxiety.

The other volumes nominated for that particular award are certainly accomplished. Andre Alexis' Pastoral is incisive and exacting. K.D. Miller's All Saints exhibits a delicate balance throughout the linked collection of stories, which is difficult to sustain (this was true, too, of The Juliet Stories). The layered storytelling in Steven Galloway's The Confabulist is simply exquisite. And Miriam Toews' novels are characterized by strong and engaging women's voices with Yoli's exceptionally striking because it deliberates upon a woman's desire to take her own life in All My Puny Sorrows (this claimed the prize).

Girl Runner offers, however, a winning combination of story and character. Not only the grit and sweat of sport and the pursuit of perfection as in Angie Abdou's The Bone Cage or Elizabeth Ruth's Matadora. Nor the cool rhythmic slip between historical and contemporary times so often evident in Jane Urquhart's fiction. Not just the total immersion in a female voice which might not be entirely reliable, as with Catherine Bush's Accusation or Claire Messud's The Woman Upstairs. Nor the kaleidoscopic view of life from near-beginning to near-end like Christina Schwarz's The Edge of the Earth or Hilary Scharper's Perdita. But something of all of these.

Thematically, the idea of getting acquainted with Aganetha Smart via memories from her life, which spanned the better part of the twentieth century, immediately appealed.

Stylistically, the transitions between the past and present narratives chronicling Aganetha's experiences are handled brilliantly.

Sometimes they are seamless, the rush between times mirroring that moment when a runner truly hits her stride, that sense of simultaneous weightlessness and solidity, as each step propels. And sometimes they are abrupt, like the rush of stopping, the breathlessness of shifting into a different state.

So at the end of one segment, Aganetha recalls an earlier run, euphoric and empowered. "I know I can’t be spent."

And, then, the next segment begins: "We've come to the blue car: nondescript, wouldn’t stand out in police alerts. The young man, Max, is opening a rear door, and the girl wheels my chair nearer. I say, Are we going somewhere?"

This is tremendously satisfying, and the prose is carefully constructed to more generally echo Aganetha's state of being as well.

In her youth, she speaks directly, pointedly. She is emboldened.

In her later years, she moves as others wish her to move. And although she speaks with the same directness, she no longer possesses the same sense of agency, and this is reflected not only in the nuts-and-bolts breakdown of individual scenes, but in a slightly-meandery and more distanced tone. Aganetha is no longer on the track; she is sitting on the sidelines.

But if readers were expecting a quiet, reflective read, they have forgotten that Aganetha is still a runner at heart.

For all the calm that exists when a runner reaches her stride, her heart is pumping and her feet are pounding. Very near the beginning of Girl Runner, readers are informed that this is no dreamy slice-of-life story but one with a plot, a mystery.

Here it is: the signal that the race is underway.

"Lies. Let me count the ways.
There is the lie of omission, the lie of avoidance, the lie outright, the boast, the tiny indulgence or fudging, the sly miscalculation, the rounding up or down, there is flattery, and the little white lie, and there is the bold sweep, the lie of epic proportions with a million smaller lies to underpin it, there are the muddling lies that confuse or confound, the lie of distraction, the lie that knows it will be caught out, the cold-blooded lie and the quick-witted lie and the lie made in terror and haste, the lie that must lie and lie again to cover its tracks, and, of course, there is the lie that fools even the liar, who knows not what he or she propagates.
That last one is the most dangerous of all, for it can trick almost everyone. It can come to look like the truth.
And so I think of another lie. The lie of my own choosing, that lives with me yet, and without me. The lie that protects. That shelters. That builds its fragile hiding place of love."

Fragility and protection, strength and duplicity, true-self and under-self: Girl Runner does not detour around contradictions.

"There is absence, and there is vanishing, and these are not the same thing at all."

Maybe these are the sort of imaginings which float in the author's mind when she is running, when she is creating the space in which the ideas will emerge, caught between cascades of motion and moments of stillness. (She describes her writing process in this piece for CBC Canada Writes.)

"The appearance of perfection does not interest me. It is the illumination of near-disaster beside which we all teeter, at all times, that interests me. It is laughing in the face of what might have been, and what is not." (It might sound as though this is lifted from the article cited in the paragraph above, but all of these quotes are from the novel.)

This teetering is at the heart of Girl Runner and adds substantial heft to the narrative. Aganetha is a fully credible and expansive character because even when she is still, she is in motion. She is still reevalating, examining, considering, deliberating. She is active, even when she appears confined. She is still running her race.

"“I think I would run even if I knew I would never win another race again. It’s weird. I can’t explain it. It’s like something I can’t turn off.'"

Here's hoping that Carrie Snyder feels the same way -- about running, perhaps, but most definitely about storytelling. I don't want her to turn it off. I'm adding her to my list of MRE authors.

This piece first appeared on BuriedInPrint. ( )
  buriedinprint | Feb 19, 2015 |
Snyder demonstrates creativity as well as polished writing. Significant narrative for a debut benchmark.

I was drawn to Aggie’s independence, her groundbreaking achievement and her desire for more when the era was limited to women. Despite her age, Aggie is witty, plucky and hearty. Her memory and losses are tearful, as she revisits her tormented past.

I was under the impression we would read of Aggie’s trials and tribulations of her Olympic experience and success, instead the book only skimmed the surface of this aspect. Describing the many challenges female athletes faced during this time period was glossed over, however, Aggie’s problem riddled personal and family issues monopolized attention as she flashes back to her painful history. Her resilience is inspiring, her escape mechanism running. The narrative is somewhat disincentive, never reaching its impetus with all its potential.

Snyder skillfully addresses life after glory, redemption, dreams and failures. Focusing on public and private uneasiness through a memorable character. Entertaining read. ( )
  melinda_hence | Feb 16, 2015 |
Showing 1-5 of 8 (next | show all)
The book is easy to leap into and be carried along with, the pace at once steady and breathless.

Carrie Snyder’s novel is not one framed merely in reminiscences, the vibrant past contrasted against a thin and aging future; the present is filled with drama and challenge as well, as two mysterious characters show up at the nursing home to which Aggie is confined and spirit her off to the home she was raised in. .. However, what defines the novel is the depth and breadth of Aggie herself; she’s a rare heroine whose rich internal life is matched only by the abundance of her external living. Her complexities, her desires and failures and her deep relationships are the book’s heart; her connections to her family and friends, her mentors and antagonists, are authentic and beautifully wrought.
 
Girl Runner is a well-paced book that weaves together the past and present narratives of an uncompromising woman’s life. We are sped through an accessible read that deftly touches on the difficult subjects of gender equality, abortion, and the obstacles women face in professional sports. Throughout the novel, Snyder, a distance runner herself, manages to capture the essence of the need to run, that marrow-deep desire....At its core, Girl Runner manages to remind us of the challenges often set before women attempting to achieve something once thought to be dangerous or out of reach, or even quite simply attempting to achieve the life they desire.
 
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Für Kevin, der mir geholfen hat, meine innere Athletin zu finden. Und für unsere Kinder, Angus, Annabella, Flora und Calvin, die immer wussten wie man spielt.
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Vorwort: Dies ist nicht der Liebesgesang der Aganetha Smart.
"Gehen wir, Aggie?"
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"As a young runner, Aganetha Smart defied everyone's expectations to win a gold medal for Canada in the 1928 Olympics. It was a revolutionary victory, because this was the first Games in which women could compete in track events--and they did so despite opposition. But now Aganetha Smart is in a nursing home, and nobody realizes that the frail centenarian was once a bold pioneer"--Amazon.com.

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