Waiting for Joe

by Sandra Birdsell

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After you've lost it allnbsp;-- job, house, savings, futurenbsp;--what have you got left? A piercing new novel of our times by one of Canada's finest fiction writers. On a chilly early morning in late spring, Joe Beaudry and his wife, Laurie, wake up in circumstances that would challenge saints: they are on the lam in a stolen motorhome on the edge of a Walmart parking lot in Regina, Saskatchewan. They've gone bust, spectacularly: lost the house that was Joe's gift from his dad, lost the show more business Joe started when he got married, and stuck his ancient father in a nursing home in Winnipeg so they could flee their creditors. Joe knows the reality of the situation, and is trying to raise enough cash to get them both to Fort McMurray where he hopes he can find work. But Laurie, even though she watched Joe trash their high-end appliances with a sledgehammer when the yard sale didn't deliver enough cash, somehow thinks it's only temporary, and maxes out their last credit card on wardrobe and hair dye and wishes and dreams. For Joe, it's the last straw in a marriage that once seemed star-crossed and now seems simply unworkable. Pushed to figure out what to do next, Joe simply takes off hitchhiking, leaving Laurie waiting for Joe, and Joe wondering how he will ever find meaning in a world that has disappointed his every expectation. The road for both of them provides surprising answers... show less

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7 reviews
I found Waiting For Joe by Sandra Birdsell a rather sad story but well put together and it really makes you think about what you would do if you lost everything – your business, your home and your savings. Joe owned a business that sold recreational vehicles, but after 9/11, people weren’t doing a lot of travelling and his business goes into foreclosure. After they lose their house, Joe deposits his father in a nursing home, steals an RV and he and his wife head out, deciding to go north to the oil boom town of Fort McMurray. They get as far as Regina, and while parked in the Walmart parking lot, Joe and Laurie quarrel and Joe realizes that Laurie will always live beyond her means and can’t control her spending. This is the final show more straw for him in a marriage that has been slipping for years and he simply walks away.

This is a very introspective read about how life’s events impact families, in this case, Joe, Laurie and Joe’s elderly father, Alfred. Each one sifts through their past thinking about both the good and bad choices they have made and how they have come to this low point. Joe through his stubborn pride and indecision and Laurie through her compulsive shopping which fuels her guilt and shame. The author uses these inner revelations to expose her characters motivations, but I found that these many flashbacks distracted from the immediacy of the story.

Waiting For Joe didn’t quite reach the heights I was hoping for. The book seemed mired down by it’s dwelling on the complicated histories of the main characters. Although I was looking for a slightly different story, the author's writing was excellent, immersing the reader in this bleak contemporary story.
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½
Joe and Laurie have lost everything: their business is bankrupt, they've lost the house Joe's father had given them...so they head west from Winnipeg in a stolen RV, with Joe hoping to find work in Fort McMurray. As the book opens, we find them parked at a Walmart in Regina, where Joe is working for a few days to make enough money to complete the trip. But after a quarrel with Laurie, Joe starts hitchhiking west, leaving her with the RV in the Walmart parking lot.

Through various flashbacks, we learn about the backstory...how Joe and Laurie lost their mothers, how they found each other, Joe's childhood with his father, Alfred and best friend, Steve.

This really is a story about Joe -- about how he re-evaluates his life as he finds show more himself starting over in middle age. It's a strong character portrayal and very well written. Good stuff! show less
½
Joe Beaudry's RV business has gone bust and so he and his wife Laurie sell everything and hit the road, driving from Winnipeg to Regina before parking their motorhome in the lot next to WalMart. Joe has told Laurie they will go to Fort McMurray, where he will get work. But they never make it that far. The truth is that Joe doesn't know what he wants to do and doesn't know if Laurie even figures in his half-formed, ever-changing plans. He has not shared these doubts with his wife, who also doesn't know that the motorhome is stolen, that Joe drove it off the RV lot before the new owner was in a position to know the difference. Plagued by self doubt, terrified of an uncertain future and fleeing a past in which he has repeatedly made poor show more choices and disappointed those he loves, Joe takes off, leaving Laurie waiting for him in Regina while he hitchhikes to Vancouver to seek out some old friends he thinks might be able to save him. Birdsell's novel is a suspenseful and brutally honest examination of how life forces us to compromise and conveys the harsh message that in the final analysis we must lay sole claim to our flaws and failures. Brilliant and unsentimental. show less
An overextended couple find themselves bankrupt, steal an RV and station themselves in a Walmart parking lot. Joe, the husband leaves when his wife's spending continues. The story is of his journey westward and those he meets along the way. Interesting from the perspective of its Canadian context and original depiction of unexpected poverty in the first decade of the 21st century.
½
I picked this up because it was on a "best of 2010" list but quickly realized it was not my cup of tea. Unlikeable characters and I think the word "penis" was used far too early on for it to be anything other than unsettling. No thanks.
This book was going along with occasional segments of interest & then suddenly there's a very short chapter set 5 years later & things are unsatisfyingly chopped off.
This book was going along with occasional segments of interest & then suddenly there's a very short chapter set 5 years later & things are unsatisfyingly chopped off.

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ThingScore 50
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At this point, you must be assuming this novel is a satire of CanLit-in-a-box fiction. Alas, it’s not. Even its very rich literary prose — throbbing present-tense stuff like “She still holds his semen” that strives to evoke the grittiness and hard realities of life in poetic terms, which is the kind of thing that Birdsell has done with far greater success in her earlier books — show more notably The Russlander — doesn’t stand up to scrutiny at times....
These might seem like uncharitable quibbles, but when a novel’s story is overly familiar at best and flailing at worst, the reader can seek refuge only in the prose. Failing to find it there, your best bet, if you’re one of Sandra Birdsell’s many fans, might be to pass over the belly-up Waiting for Joe and reread one of her earlier, more vital novels
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added by vancouverdeb
This superb new novel by Manitoba-born literary star Sandra Birdsell opens with the title character, a desperate middle-aged man, awakening in a motor home in a Regina Wal-Mart parking lot and ends as he crosses a field outside Winnipeg....The novel is a spiritual journey, and each episode, compelling in itself, leads us to consider the question of faith versus fate; reasons for what happens show more against the randomness of life; the miraculous in the everyday; the expiation of guilt in the relationships of parents and children, friends; and how the radicalism of Christ is perverted, even by well-meaning, good people, into a desire for the safe and comfortable....Waiting for Joe stirs us to wonder who is waiting for us to change, move on, or come home to a spiritual rest show less
added by vancouverdeb
Readers hoping for the kind of satisfaction afforded by a resolution ...might be let down by Waiting for Joe. As its title hints, this novel flirts with absurdism; not the tragicomic abstract absurdism of Waiting for Godot, but a bleak, contemporary Prairie absurdism of sodium lights, asphalt, unemployment and the inexorable discovery that, televangelists notwithstanding, God might not have show more anything special in mind for any of us.......As Joe’s faith unravels, however, so does Waiting for Joe’s plot. As his world opens up, themes proliferate – sexual abuse, immigration, consumerism – and are just as quickly dropped....Less forgivable are the handful of plot devices that aren’t so much absurd as just unrealistic...It's not all bad.... show less
added by vancouverdeb

Author Information

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10+ Works 548 Members
Sandra Birdsell was born and raised in Manitoba the 5th of 10 children. She began publishing in 1982 at the age of 40 and has since published 3 books of short fiction, and 3 novels, including; Missing Child, The Town That Floated Away, The Two-Headed Calf, The Chrome Suite, Ladies of the House and Night Travellers Birdsell was shortlisted for the show more Governor General's Award, for The Two-Headed Calf, in 1997. She was also shortlisted for the Governor General's Award, for The Chrome Suite. Birdsell won the Marian Engel Award, the Writers' Development Trust, for major contribution to literature in 1993, the McNally Robinson Best Book of the Year, for The Chrome Suite in 1993, as well as the W.H. Smith/Books in Canada First Novel Award, for The Missing Child in 1990. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
2010
People/Characters
Joe Beaudry; Laurie Beaudry; Alfred Beaudry; Steve Greyeyes
Important places
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada; Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
Dedication
Once again , for Jan Nowina-Zarzycki
First words
It is early morning when Joe Beaudry awakens to a droning sound, the ceiling fan, he thinks
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Then , in spring, something told them told them to leave, and whereever they went, it was the right place to be.
Blurbers
Ondaatje, Michael; Munro, Alice

Classifications

Genres
General Fiction, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS8000Language and LiteratureAmerican literature
BISAC

Statistics

Members
46
Popularity
647,190
Reviews
7
Rating
(2.95)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
4