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{{short description|1987 novel by Michael Ondaatje}} | |||
'''''In the Skin of a Lion,''''' a novel set mainly in ], ], ] by ], tells a story of immigrants who built Toronto. Ondaatje's later and more famous novel '']'' is in part a sequel to ''In the Skin of a Lion''; continuing the characters of Hana and Caravaggio. | |||
{{about||the TV episode|In the Skin of a Lion (Friday Night Lights)}} | |||
{{Infobox book | |||
| italic title = <!--(see above)--> | |||
| name = | |||
| image = InTheSkinOfALion.jpg | |||
| image_size = | |||
| alt = | |||
| caption =First edition | |||
| author = ] | |||
| audio_read_by = | |||
| title_orig = | |||
| orig_lang_code = | |||
| title_working = | |||
| translator = | |||
| illustrator = | |||
| cover_artist = | |||
| country = Canada | |||
| language = English | |||
| series = | |||
| release_number = | |||
| subject = | |||
| genre = Fiction, Historical Fiction | |||
| set_in = | |||
| publisher = ] | |||
| publisher2 = | |||
| pub_date = 1987 | |||
| english_pub_date = | |||
| published = | |||
| media_type = Print | |||
| pages = 243 | |||
| awards = ] | |||
| isbn = 0394563638 | |||
| isbn_note = | |||
| oclc = 16089069 | |||
| dewey = | |||
| congress = | |||
| preceded_by = | |||
| followed_by = | |||
| native_wikisource = | |||
| wikisource = | |||
| notes = | |||
| exclude_cover = | |||
| website = | |||
}} | |||
'''''In the Skin of a Lion''''' is a novel by ]–]n writer ]. It was first published in 1987 by ]. The novel fictionalizes the lives of the immigrants who played a large role in the building of the city of Toronto in the early 1900s,<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/michael-ondaatje/|title=Michael Ondaatje|last=Thesen|first=Sharon|newspaper=]|access-date=2016-12-01|archive-date=2019-04-13|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190413235157/https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/michael-ondaatje|url-status=live}}</ref> but whose contributions never became part of the city's official history.<ref name=":0">Devi, S. Poorna Mala. "Immigrants' experience in Michael Ondaatje's novels in the skin of a lion and the English patient." ''Language In India'', January 2015, 547+. ''Literature Resource Center'' (accessed December 1, 2016). http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?p=GLS&sw=w&u=ocul_carleton&v=2.1&it=r&id=GALE%7CA404830601&asid=61174144a6b42fbc8556f9c27c32c1c3 {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171024205807/http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?p=GLS&sw=w&u=ocul_carleton&v=2.1&it=r&id=GALE%7CA404830601&asid=61174144a6b42fbc8556f9c27c32c1c3 |date=2017-10-24 }}</ref> Ondaatje illuminates the investment of these settlers in Canada, through their labour, while they remain outsiders to mainstream society. ''In the Skin of a Lion'' is thus an exposé of the migrant condition: "It is a novel about the wearing and the removal of masks; the shedding of skin, the transformations and translations of identity."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://literature.britishcouncil.org/writer/michael-ondaatje|title=Michael Ondaatje – Literature|website=literature.britishcouncil.org|access-date=2016-12-01|archive-date=2019-03-27|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190327123308/https://literature.britishcouncil.org/writer/michael-ondaatje|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
An important aspect of the novel is its depiction of Toronto in the ]. Ondaatje spent many months in the archives of the City of Toronto and newspapers of the era. Prominence is given to the construction of Toronto landmarks, such as the ] and the ], and focuses on the lives of the immigrant workers. By doing so, he gives a voice to the blood, sweat and tears of these workers who have never been recognized by 'official' history. The plot incorporates a number of true stories of the time, examples being the falling of the nun, the disappearance of ] and the murder of ] organizers ]. | |||
An important aspect of the novel is its depiction of Toronto in the 1930s. Ondaatje spent many months in the ] and newspapers of the era. Prominence is given to the construction of two Toronto landmarks, the ], commonly known as the Bloor Street Viaduct, and the ], and focuses on the lives of the immigrant workers.<ref>"Michael Ondaatje." In ''An Anthology of Canadian Literature in English'', edited by Donna Bennett and Russell Brown, 928-30. 3rd ed. Toronto, ON: Oxford University Press, 2010.</ref> The plot incorporates a number of true stories of the time, such as the fall of a nun from a bridge,<ref>{{cite news|last=Kuitenbrouwer|first=Peter|date=April 24, 2009|title=Bookmarking Ondaatje's viaduct story|url=https://www.pressreader.com/canada/national-post-latest-edition/20090424/283098475027021|work=National Post|location=Toronto|access-date=2018-07-25|archive-date=2018-07-25|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180725122842/https://www.pressreader.com/canada/national-post-latest-edition/20090424/283098475027021|url-status=live}}</ref> the disappearance of ], the political suppression of Police Chief ], and the murder of ] organizers ]. | |||
The structure of the novel may be described as ], and/or ] in that Ondaatje uses many voices, images, and re-organizes time to tell the stories. Thematically, the book may be categorized as ] with its focus on immigrants and their native cultures and languages. | |||
In a minor section of the novel, Patrick Lewis visits ] in which Ondaatje describes various parts of the town including: Broadway Street, Wheelers Needleworks, Medusa, Paris Plains, just north of the town, the Arlington hotel, and ]. | |||
The novel's title is a line from '']''. | |||
The novel's title is taken from a line in ''],'' following the death of Enkidu. It is located in the epigraph as "I will let my hair grow long for your sake, I will wander through the wilderness in the skin of a lion," echoing the theme of converging voices re-telling history. | |||
== Character list == | |||
* Patrick Lewis | |||
* Ambrose Small | |||
* Alice Gull | |||
* Hana Gull | |||
* Clara Dickens | |||
* David Caravaggio | |||
* Nicholas Temelcoff | |||
* Commissioner Rowland Harris | |||
* Cato | |||
* Giannetta | |||
* Hazen Lewis | |||
The book was nominated for the ] for English Language Fiction in 1987. Ondaatje's more famous 1992 novel, '']'', is, in part, a sequel to ''In the Skin of a Lion'', continuing the characters of Hana and Caravaggio as well as revealing the fate of this novel's main character, Patrick Lewis. | |||
== '''BOOK ONE''' == | |||
==Plot summary== | |||
By, '''Abhinav.Kanaya''' ] 00:31, 10 November 2006 (UTC) | |||
=== |
===Book One=== | ||
Starts off as the end of the book. Patrick is going to tell Hana about his story... Patrick has a father called Hazen Lewis. Both father and son tie the rope around the cow and help it out of the frozen water. Hazen Lewis goes to Rathbun Timber Headquarters to show idea of dynamite explosion. In April it is the melting of the lake. Patrick absorbed knowledge from a distance. When Patrick was 11, he went after a rare blue moth in winter. Patrick wants to join a group of loggers who are skating on the ice, but does not trust himself or them in the end. | |||
====Little Seeds==== | |||
Little seeds designates the growing years of the main character, Patrick Lewis, whence the seeds were planted for his subsiquent actions in the novel. For example, as a young boy in depot creek, Ontario, Patrick watches the loggers come to town in the winter, and work in the mills in the other seasons. He watches the loggers skating on the river. His father, a worker, works for two or three farms. When Patrick was 15, Hazen Lewis became a dynamiter who was meticulus in washing his clothes every evening in case there were remnants, little seeds of explosives on his apperal. | |||
The first chapter, "Little Seeds," describes the growing years of the main character, Patrick Lewis, providing causation for his subsequent actions in the novel. As a young boy in Depot Creek, Ontario, Patrick watches the loggers arrive in town in the winter, work in the mills in the other seasons, and skate on the frozen river. Patrick's father, Hazen Lewis, becomes a ]r and is meticulous when washing his clothes each evening to remove remnants of explosives on his apparel. These elements form the foundation of the subsequent narrative: Depot Creek, the loggers skating, learning about dynamite, etc. | |||
All of these elements are the little seeds of the subsequent narrative: depot creek, the loggers skating, learning about dynamite, etc. | |||
=== |
====The Bridge==== | ||
The |
"The Bridge" deals with the construction of the ], which will link eastern Toronto with the centre of the city and will carry traffic, water and electricity across the Don Valley. R.C. Harris, the city's Commissioner of Public Works often visits the bridge at night. One night, five nuns wander onto the unfinished bridge and one falls off. Nicholas Temelcoff, a Macedonian immigrant worker on the bridge, saves the nun who fell off the bridge, dislocating his arm. The nun, already missing her veil, tears her habit to make him a sling. Later, at a bar, he offers her brandy, compliments, and a new lease on life. Temelcoff is a silent man who struggles with English yet they are able to transcend their social and language barriers through the commonality of their scars— his from work, hers from being "always unlucky." This moment is the beginning of the nun's eventual transformation into the character Alice. He eventually falls asleep and wakes to find a doctor treating his arm and the nun gone. | ||
====The Searcher==== | |||
The Bridge in short - Temelcoff saves the nun, Titled 'The Bridge', because it is between Patrick's life. It introduces Caravaggio. At the time, Patrick is not in Toronto | |||
As a young man, Patrick leaves the profession that killed his father and sets out to find the vanished millionaire ]. This leads him to Small's mistress Clara Dickens and to a relationship with her. Eventually, Patrick loses interest in finding Small, hoping only to remove Clara from Small. Clara tells Patrick that she will leave him to go after Small and warns him not to follow her. Patrick is ]. Three years later, Clara's friend Alice unexpectedly arrives and tells Patrick that Clara's mother might know where Clara is. Patrick sets out to search for Clara. On meeting Clara's mother, Patrick learns that Clara and Small are living in his old hometown. Patrick finds Small living in a house owned by a timber company, and Small attempts to set him on fire—once by dropping ] on him and then by throwing a ]. Patrick escapes to his hotel room and is visited by Clara, who dresses his wounds and makes love to him before returning to Small. | |||
=== |
===Book Two=== | ||
====Palace of Purification==== | |||
Patrick's childhood letters were all that remained with him as he arrives at Union Train Station. Ambrose Small is a millionaire who is missing. Small bought the Grand Opera Theatre at age 28 and married Theresa Kormann. He then fell in love with actress Clara Dickens. The Press called Small a 'Jackal'. Patrick meets Clara Dickens and tries to seduce her, but she does it in the end. Clara drops Patrick back to the Arlington hotel and then the next day they set off together for a few days to Clara's friend's farmhouse. Alice is introduced as Clara's friend. Clara fell in love aged 16 with a boy named Stump Jones. Patrick has a dream of Small asking him to cut off the grey peacock from his back and he does it with a penknife. | |||
In 1930, Patrick is working as a dynamiter on a tunnel under ], a project of Commissioner Rowland Harris. Patrick rents an apartment in a ] neighborhood. He is accepted into the neighborhood and is invited by Kosta, a fellow dynamiter, to a gathering at the Waterworks—a place where various nationalities gather for secret political discussions and entertainment. Patrick witnesses a performance in which an actor repeatedly smashes her hand against the stage and rushes forward to help her. He recognizes her as Alice Gull. His act of helping her turns out to be part of the show. Patrick visits Alice and learns about Hana, her nine-year-old daughter. Patrick and Alice become lovers. Patrick finds work in a leather company through Alice's friends and meets Nicholas Temelcoff, now a baker. On studying the bridge, Patrick learns about the nun that had fallen off, whose body was never found. He makes the connection after talking with Temelcoff and promises to look after Hana. | |||
====Remorse==== | |||
A lot of Romance. Patrick hears about Clara's history and about Small. Clara and Alice talk into the night until Patrick goes off to bed. Alice and Clara draw his portrait as he sleeps. Patrick says he liked Alice when asked by Clara and apreciates their artwork. Clara says that Alice is a way better actress than her on stage. Clara tells Patrick not to follow her as she goes to Ambrose Small. Clara had left a blind Iguana with him. Patrick writes many letters to Clara.Caravaggio is the neighbourhood thief. Alice visits Patrick unexpectedly. She tells him to go and look for Clara. Patrick has dinner with Clara's mother. She tells him that Stump Jones and Clara actually married and divorced. Patrick finds out where Clara is. Small and Patrick talk. Small spills drops of kerosene on Patrick and sets him on fire, but this ends up as a dream too! | |||
Patrick travels by train, north of ], then takes a steamer to a ] hotel frequented by the rich. He burns down the hotel, then escapes on a small boat, traveling to the next island, where he meets the blind Elizabeth. We learn that Alice has died suddenly and that Patrick committed the arson out of anger. Patrick swims out to a boat, knowing he will be caught by the authorities. | |||
The Searcher is when Patrick is searching for the meaning of his life | |||
== |
===Book Three=== | ||
=== |
====Caravaggio==== | ||
In the ], Patrick and two other prisoners, Buck and Caravaggio, are painting the roof. Patrick and Buck paint Caravaggio in the blue of the roof so he can hide and escape. He steals new clothes and changes his dressing. Jumping a ], he makes his way north toward cottage country. He has a scar from an attack from which Patrick saved him by yelling out a square dance call. Caravaggio recalls his first robbery, in the course of which he broke his ankle while retrieving a painting, so he had hidden in a mushroom factory where a young woman named Giannetta helped him recover, with whom he had escaped by dressing as a woman. Caravaggio enters the cottage of a woman whom he met on the lake and calls his wife to let her know he's all right. After talking to the cottage owner, he returns to his brother-in-law's house, reuniting with Giannetta. | |||
It is 1930. Patrick, along with the other workers, is digging up underneath the lake. It is a mad scheme by Commissioner Rowland Harris. Patrick dynamites the rock by using his father's skills. The Waterworks is being built on the old Victoria Park Forest. Patrick still has the Iguana Clara gave him. He stays in an apartment building. R.Harris's dream is to create a Palace of Water. Patrick eats most of his meals at the Thompson Grill. "Gooshter" is the Macedonian word for Iguana. Patrick felt ashamed to how the Macedonian friends knew so little about him. Kosta also works with dynamite. Kosta invites Patrick to a gathering where various nationalities meet and ilegally discuss politics and have fun. A performance of puppets where there is a lady performing as a puppet. The whole croud was with her. It was Alice Gull! | |||
====Maritime Theatre==== | |||
Patrick stopped Alice in this performance. Hana is a 9 year old girl staying with Alice, who is her mother. Cato was Alice's husband. Patrick gets a new job through Alice. Patrick could not stop thinking of her. Hana was similar to Alice Patrick was to shy to embrace her. They go to a bakery called 'Geranium Bakery' where Patrick meets Nicholas Temelkoff. Hana's favourite story was about Cato and the socks. Patrick was in Riverdale library looking at Commissioner Harris's bridge construction that took 2 years to complete. He thinks about Alice, if she was a nun. Patrick goes to visit Nicholas Temelkoff and ask him about his rescue of the nun. Patrick says he wants to look after Hana and is in deep love with Alice. Alice has purified Patrick from his past | |||
Four years later, Patrick is released from prison and meets Temelcoff at the Geranium Bakery. Hana, now sixteen, has been living with Temelcoff's family. Patrick takes responsibility for Hana. One night, she wakes him to say that Clara Dickens has called. She tells him that Small is dead and asks him to pick her up from ]. | |||
Realizing that the water supply is vulnerable to being cut off or poisoned, Harris installs guards at the Waterworks, which he built. Caravaggio introduces Patrick to his wife. They fraternize at a party for the rich, then steal a multimillion-dollar yacht from a couple they ]. Patrick intends to blow up the Filtration Plant with dynamite and Caravaggio's help. Patrick enters the plant through the water intake. He places dynamite about the plant testing facility and carries the detonating box to Harris' office, where he accuses Harris of exploiting the workers and ignoring their plight. Patrick tells Harris how Alice Gull was killed and we learn that she accidentally picked up the wrong satchel, containing a bomb. Exhausted, Patrick falls asleep, and in the morning Harris asks the police to defuse the bombs and bring a nurse for Patrick. | |||
===REMORSE=== | |||
Patrick awakes and goes with Hana to retrieve Clara. At Hana's urging, Patrick tells her about Clara. Patrick asks Hana to drive to Marmora. The book ends with "'Lights' he said." | |||
Alice was happiest when she was pregnant. Patrick is travelling somewhere past Huntsville. He then boards the Algonquin steamer. There is an explosion in Muskoka Hotel. It was done by Patrick in love for Alice, since she is dead. Patrick meets a blind woman called Elizabeth. He knows he will be caught by the police soon... | |||
== |
== Analysis == | ||
This novel is categorized thematically as ], as it is largely concerned with the native cultures and languages of immigrants in Canada.<ref name=":0" /> Additionally, the structure of the novel may be described as ] in that Ondaatje uses the integration of different voices, images, and re-organization of time to tell these stories. | |||
Watson and McLeod note the use of a "searcher-figure" in Patrick, and by extension the narrator of the story, who act as observers finding "'truths'" in order to construct a cohesive history representative of all the parts that created it.<ref>Watson, Diane, and John McLeod. "Michael Ondaatje: Overview." In Brown, Susan Windisch, ''Contemporary Novelists'', 6th ed. New York: St. James Press, 1996. ''Literature Resource Center'' (accessed December 1, 2016). http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?p=GLS&sw=w&u=ocul_carleton&v=2.1&it=r&id=GALE%7CH1420006128&asid=af249acf357d5393fe24bb62e97ca9b4 {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170510131834/http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?p=GLS&sw=w&u=ocul_carleton&v=2.1&it=r&id=GALE%7CH1420006128&asid=af249acf357d5393fe24bb62e97ca9b4 |date=2017-05-10 }}</ref> | |||
===CARRAVAGGIO=== | |||
Devi draws on Ondaatje's use of converging narratives to uncover the vastly different experiences of immigrants in Canada, and symbolize the overarching issue of how their unofficial history is erased from the official histories.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
== Themes and motifs == | |||
Three prisoners, Buck, Lewis and Caravaggio are painting the roof of the jail. Patrick and Buck paint Caravaggio blue so that no one can see him. Caravaggio escapes. He breaks into a clothing store at night and changes there. Later, he hops onto a milk-train. Caravaggio survives on bits of chocolate a boy called Alfred gave him. Caravaggio spent many restless nights in his jail cell. Patrick and Caravaggio had spoken. Russet was Caravaggio's 'Red' dog who let him down. During his first robbery, he cracked his ankle, but stole a painting. He then hides in a mushroom factory and a young woman called Giannetta helps him by bringing him chicken. Then she and her friends help him escape by dressing him as a woman. Caravaggio returns to Giannetta, who in reality, is his wife | |||
The novel's title is taken from a line in ''The Epic of Gilgamesh'', following the death of Enkidu. It is located in the epigraph as "I will let my hair grow long for your sake, I will wander through the wilderness in the skin of a lion," echoing the theme of converging voices re-telling history. Diogenes is quoted at the climax of the third act, "n a rich man's house there is nowhere to spit except in his face."<ref>{{cite book|title=In the Skin of a Lion|author=Michael Ondaatje|publisher=Vintage International|page=239|date=1997|isbn=0679772669}}</ref> Earlier in the third act, the character Caravaggio is described as keeping a dog to assist him in his burglaries because he does not trust anyone else.<ref>{{cite book|title=In the Skin of a Lion|author=Michael Ondaatje|publisher=Vintage International|page=203|date=1997|isbn=0679772669}}</ref> Throughout the book, light (from a lantern, flaming cattails and other sources) and darkness plays heavily in the context of the main characters and development of the plot, i.e., illumination of the Finnish loggers, moonlight, when Caravaggio is learning to become a thief in total darkness, Patrick's removal of the lamp when breaking into the water plant, the lights being turned off during the final dialogue between Patrick and Harris. The color blue is also mentioned often, especially during Caravaggio's escape from prison to help him camouflage himself against the blue prison roof. The idea of ''demarcation'' is emphasized by Caravaggio to Patrick. | |||
==Awards and recognition== | |||
===MARITIME THEATRE=== | |||
*Nominated for the ]. | |||
*''In the Skin of a Lion'' championed by ], won the 2002 edition of '']''. | |||
*The ] prepared a special tour of its collection of historic photos, taken by ], tailored for students reading ''In the Skin of a Lion'', as Ondaatje's research for the novel was influenced by studying the photos.<ref name=Duffy>{{cite news | |||
|url = https://www.zotero.org/groups/history_and_its_publics/items/itemKey/6I2ZQME5 | |||
|title = Furnishing the Pictures: Arthur S. Goss, Michael Ondaatje and the Imag(in)ing of Toronto | |||
|publisher = ] | |||
|author = Dennis Duffy | |||
|date = Summer 2001 | |||
|access-date = 2013-01-26 | |||
|quote = In the tunnel under Lake Ontario two men shake hands on an incline of mud. Beside them a pickaxe and a lamp, their dirt-streaked faces pivoting to look towards the camera. For a moment, while the film receives the image, everything is still, the other tunnel workers silent. Then Arthur Goss, the city photographer, packs up his tripod and glass plates, unhooks the cord of lights that creates a vista of open tunnel behind the two men, walks with his equipment the fifty yards to the ladder, and climbs out into sunlight. | |||
|archive-date = 2016-03-05 | |||
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160305072719/https://www.zotero.org/groups/history_and_its_publics/items/itemKey/6I2ZQME5 | |||
|url-status = live | |||
}}</ref><ref name=CotaOndaatjeGoss>{{cite news | |||
| url = http://www.toronto.ca/archives/skin_of_a_lion2.htm | |||
| title = In the Skin of a Lion | |||
| publisher = ] | |||
| access-date = 2013-01-26 | |||
| quote = On a visit to the City of Toronto Archives, students will see archival photographs recording the construction of the Bloor Street Viaduct and the R. C. Harris filtration plant, the two major settings in In the Skin of a Lion. | |||
| archive-date = 2013-05-13 | |||
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130513020935/http://www.toronto.ca/archives/skin_of_a_lion2.htm | |||
| url-status = live | |||
}}</ref> | |||
*In 2009, a passage from "The Bridge" was placed at the Bloor Street Viaduct in Toronto, becoming the inaugural "bookmark" for , and marking the beginning of Canada's literary trail.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://exhibit.projectbookmarkcanada.ca/in-the-skin-of-a-lion-index|title=In the Skin of a Lion|website=Project Bookmark Canada: Exhibits|access-date=2016-12-01|archive-date=2016-12-02|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161202040707/http://exhibit.projectbookmarkcanada.ca/in-the-skin-of-a-lion-index|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
{{portal|Novels}} | |||
*] | |||
==Notes== | |||
Patrick is released from prison. He goes to the Geranium Bakery and embraces Nicholas Temelkoff. Meets Hana. Small tells Clara of all about what he has done in the past before he dies. Clara calls Patrick from Marmora. Ambrose Small is dead. Hana and Patrick will go and pick her up. NOT A DREAM!! - Harris has tight security for the Waterworks. He says anyone can poison the city or cut the supply of water. Caravaggio introduces Patrick to his wife. They sail on a stolen yacht called 'The Annalisa.' Patrick is going to dynamite the Filtration Plant, in the Waterworks with the help of Caravaggio. Harris hears a thump, but ignores it. Patrick goes into Harris's office. Alice Gull was killed by an 'anarchist' She carried the wrong bag with dynamite. Patrick falls asleep. A nurse tends to him... Patrick was dreaming. He goes with Hana to get Clara. Book ends with him saying 'Lights' | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
==Awards and recognition== | |||
*''In the Skin of a Lion'' was one of the selected books in the ] edition of '']'', championed by ]. | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
* ''Mash Magazine'' (2000). . mashmagazine.com. | |||
* | |||
* {{cite book | |||
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=d_D5Ii3PMAAC&dq=In+the+skin+of+a+lion+Michael+Ondaatje+goss&pg=PT108 | |||
| title = In the Skin of a Lion | |||
| publisher = ] | |||
| author = Michael Ondaatje | |||
| author-link = Michael Ondaatje | |||
| year = 1987 | |||
| access-date = 2013-01-26 | |||
| isbn = 9780307776631 | |||
}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:In The Skin Of A Lion}} | |||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
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Latest revision as of 00:54, 8 January 2025
1987 novel by Michael Ondaatje For the TV episode, see In the Skin of a Lion (Friday Night Lights).First edition | |
Author | Michael Ondaatje |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Fiction, Historical Fiction |
Publisher | McClelland and Stewart |
Publication date | 1987 |
Publication place | Canada |
Media type | |
Pages | 243 |
Awards | Governor General's Award |
ISBN | 0394563638 |
OCLC | 16089069 |
In the Skin of a Lion is a novel by Canadian–Sri Lankan writer Michael Ondaatje. It was first published in 1987 by McClelland and Stewart. The novel fictionalizes the lives of the immigrants who played a large role in the building of the city of Toronto in the early 1900s, but whose contributions never became part of the city's official history. Ondaatje illuminates the investment of these settlers in Canada, through their labour, while they remain outsiders to mainstream society. In the Skin of a Lion is thus an exposé of the migrant condition: "It is a novel about the wearing and the removal of masks; the shedding of skin, the transformations and translations of identity."
An important aspect of the novel is its depiction of Toronto in the 1930s. Ondaatje spent many months in the archives of the City of Toronto and newspapers of the era. Prominence is given to the construction of two Toronto landmarks, the Prince Edward Viaduct, commonly known as the Bloor Street Viaduct, and the R. C. Harris Water Treatment Plant, and focuses on the lives of the immigrant workers. The plot incorporates a number of true stories of the time, such as the fall of a nun from a bridge, the disappearance of Ambrose Small, the political suppression of Police Chief Draper, and the murder of labour union organizers Rosvall and Voutilainen.
In a minor section of the novel, Patrick Lewis visits Paris, Ontario in which Ondaatje describes various parts of the town including: Broadway Street, Wheelers Needleworks, Medusa, Paris Plains, just north of the town, the Arlington hotel, and Paris Public Library.
The novel's title is taken from a line in The Epic of Gilgamesh, following the death of Enkidu. It is located in the epigraph as "I will let my hair grow long for your sake, I will wander through the wilderness in the skin of a lion," echoing the theme of converging voices re-telling history.
The book was nominated for the Governor General's Award for English Language Fiction in 1987. Ondaatje's more famous 1992 novel, The English Patient, is, in part, a sequel to In the Skin of a Lion, continuing the characters of Hana and Caravaggio as well as revealing the fate of this novel's main character, Patrick Lewis.
Plot summary
Book One
Little Seeds
The first chapter, "Little Seeds," describes the growing years of the main character, Patrick Lewis, providing causation for his subsequent actions in the novel. As a young boy in Depot Creek, Ontario, Patrick watches the loggers arrive in town in the winter, work in the mills in the other seasons, and skate on the frozen river. Patrick's father, Hazen Lewis, becomes a dynamiter and is meticulous when washing his clothes each evening to remove remnants of explosives on his apparel. These elements form the foundation of the subsequent narrative: Depot Creek, the loggers skating, learning about dynamite, etc.
The Bridge
"The Bridge" deals with the construction of the Bloor Street Viaduct, which will link eastern Toronto with the centre of the city and will carry traffic, water and electricity across the Don Valley. R.C. Harris, the city's Commissioner of Public Works often visits the bridge at night. One night, five nuns wander onto the unfinished bridge and one falls off. Nicholas Temelcoff, a Macedonian immigrant worker on the bridge, saves the nun who fell off the bridge, dislocating his arm. The nun, already missing her veil, tears her habit to make him a sling. Later, at a bar, he offers her brandy, compliments, and a new lease on life. Temelcoff is a silent man who struggles with English yet they are able to transcend their social and language barriers through the commonality of their scars— his from work, hers from being "always unlucky." This moment is the beginning of the nun's eventual transformation into the character Alice. He eventually falls asleep and wakes to find a doctor treating his arm and the nun gone.
The Searcher
As a young man, Patrick leaves the profession that killed his father and sets out to find the vanished millionaire Ambrose Small. This leads him to Small's mistress Clara Dickens and to a relationship with her. Eventually, Patrick loses interest in finding Small, hoping only to remove Clara from Small. Clara tells Patrick that she will leave him to go after Small and warns him not to follow her. Patrick is broken-hearted. Three years later, Clara's friend Alice unexpectedly arrives and tells Patrick that Clara's mother might know where Clara is. Patrick sets out to search for Clara. On meeting Clara's mother, Patrick learns that Clara and Small are living in his old hometown. Patrick finds Small living in a house owned by a timber company, and Small attempts to set him on fire—once by dropping kerosene on him and then by throwing a Molotov cocktail. Patrick escapes to his hotel room and is visited by Clara, who dresses his wounds and makes love to him before returning to Small.
Book Two
Palace of Purification
In 1930, Patrick is working as a dynamiter on a tunnel under Lake Ontario, a project of Commissioner Rowland Harris. Patrick rents an apartment in a Macedonian neighborhood. He is accepted into the neighborhood and is invited by Kosta, a fellow dynamiter, to a gathering at the Waterworks—a place where various nationalities gather for secret political discussions and entertainment. Patrick witnesses a performance in which an actor repeatedly smashes her hand against the stage and rushes forward to help her. He recognizes her as Alice Gull. His act of helping her turns out to be part of the show. Patrick visits Alice and learns about Hana, her nine-year-old daughter. Patrick and Alice become lovers. Patrick finds work in a leather company through Alice's friends and meets Nicholas Temelcoff, now a baker. On studying the bridge, Patrick learns about the nun that had fallen off, whose body was never found. He makes the connection after talking with Temelcoff and promises to look after Hana.
Remorse
Patrick travels by train, north of Huntsville, then takes a steamer to a Muskoka hotel frequented by the rich. He burns down the hotel, then escapes on a small boat, traveling to the next island, where he meets the blind Elizabeth. We learn that Alice has died suddenly and that Patrick committed the arson out of anger. Patrick swims out to a boat, knowing he will be caught by the authorities.
Book Three
Caravaggio
In the Kingston Penitentiary, Patrick and two other prisoners, Buck and Caravaggio, are painting the roof. Patrick and Buck paint Caravaggio in the blue of the roof so he can hide and escape. He steals new clothes and changes his dressing. Jumping a milk train, he makes his way north toward cottage country. He has a scar from an attack from which Patrick saved him by yelling out a square dance call. Caravaggio recalls his first robbery, in the course of which he broke his ankle while retrieving a painting, so he had hidden in a mushroom factory where a young woman named Giannetta helped him recover, with whom he had escaped by dressing as a woman. Caravaggio enters the cottage of a woman whom he met on the lake and calls his wife to let her know he's all right. After talking to the cottage owner, he returns to his brother-in-law's house, reuniting with Giannetta.
Maritime Theatre
Four years later, Patrick is released from prison and meets Temelcoff at the Geranium Bakery. Hana, now sixteen, has been living with Temelcoff's family. Patrick takes responsibility for Hana. One night, she wakes him to say that Clara Dickens has called. She tells him that Small is dead and asks him to pick her up from Marmora.
Realizing that the water supply is vulnerable to being cut off or poisoned, Harris installs guards at the Waterworks, which he built. Caravaggio introduces Patrick to his wife. They fraternize at a party for the rich, then steal a multimillion-dollar yacht from a couple they chloroform. Patrick intends to blow up the Filtration Plant with dynamite and Caravaggio's help. Patrick enters the plant through the water intake. He places dynamite about the plant testing facility and carries the detonating box to Harris' office, where he accuses Harris of exploiting the workers and ignoring their plight. Patrick tells Harris how Alice Gull was killed and we learn that she accidentally picked up the wrong satchel, containing a bomb. Exhausted, Patrick falls asleep, and in the morning Harris asks the police to defuse the bombs and bring a nurse for Patrick.
Patrick awakes and goes with Hana to retrieve Clara. At Hana's urging, Patrick tells her about Clara. Patrick asks Hana to drive to Marmora. The book ends with "'Lights' he said."
Analysis
This novel is categorized thematically as post-colonial, as it is largely concerned with the native cultures and languages of immigrants in Canada. Additionally, the structure of the novel may be described as postmodern in that Ondaatje uses the integration of different voices, images, and re-organization of time to tell these stories.
Watson and McLeod note the use of a "searcher-figure" in Patrick, and by extension the narrator of the story, who act as observers finding "'truths'" in order to construct a cohesive history representative of all the parts that created it.
Devi draws on Ondaatje's use of converging narratives to uncover the vastly different experiences of immigrants in Canada, and symbolize the overarching issue of how their unofficial history is erased from the official histories.
Themes and motifs
The novel's title is taken from a line in The Epic of Gilgamesh, following the death of Enkidu. It is located in the epigraph as "I will let my hair grow long for your sake, I will wander through the wilderness in the skin of a lion," echoing the theme of converging voices re-telling history. Diogenes is quoted at the climax of the third act, "n a rich man's house there is nowhere to spit except in his face." Earlier in the third act, the character Caravaggio is described as keeping a dog to assist him in his burglaries because he does not trust anyone else. Throughout the book, light (from a lantern, flaming cattails and other sources) and darkness plays heavily in the context of the main characters and development of the plot, i.e., illumination of the Finnish loggers, moonlight, when Caravaggio is learning to become a thief in total darkness, Patrick's removal of the lamp when breaking into the water plant, the lights being turned off during the final dialogue between Patrick and Harris. The color blue is also mentioned often, especially during Caravaggio's escape from prison to help him camouflage himself against the blue prison roof. The idea of demarcation is emphasized by Caravaggio to Patrick.
Awards and recognition
- Nominated for the 1987 Governor General's Award for English Language Fiction.
- In the Skin of a Lion championed by Steven Page, won the 2002 edition of Canada Reads.
- The City of Toronto Archives prepared a special tour of its collection of historic photos, taken by Arthur Goss, tailored for students reading In the Skin of a Lion, as Ondaatje's research for the novel was influenced by studying the photos.
- In 2009, a passage from "The Bridge" was placed at the Bloor Street Viaduct in Toronto, becoming the inaugural "bookmark" for Project Bookmark Canada, and marking the beginning of Canada's literary trail.
See also
Notes
- Thesen, Sharon. "Michael Ondaatje". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 2019-04-13. Retrieved 2016-12-01.
- ^ Devi, S. Poorna Mala. "Immigrants' experience in Michael Ondaatje's novels in the skin of a lion and the English patient." Language In India, January 2015, 547+. Literature Resource Center (accessed December 1, 2016). http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?p=GLS&sw=w&u=ocul_carleton&v=2.1&it=r&id=GALE%7CA404830601&asid=61174144a6b42fbc8556f9c27c32c1c3 Archived 2017-10-24 at the Wayback Machine
- "Michael Ondaatje – Literature". literature.britishcouncil.org. Archived from the original on 2019-03-27. Retrieved 2016-12-01.
- "Michael Ondaatje." In An Anthology of Canadian Literature in English, edited by Donna Bennett and Russell Brown, 928-30. 3rd ed. Toronto, ON: Oxford University Press, 2010.
- Kuitenbrouwer, Peter (April 24, 2009). "Bookmarking Ondaatje's viaduct story". National Post. Toronto. Archived from the original on 2018-07-25. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
- Watson, Diane, and John McLeod. "Michael Ondaatje: Overview." In Brown, Susan Windisch, Contemporary Novelists, 6th ed. New York: St. James Press, 1996. Literature Resource Center (accessed December 1, 2016). http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?p=GLS&sw=w&u=ocul_carleton&v=2.1&it=r&id=GALE%7CH1420006128&asid=af249acf357d5393fe24bb62e97ca9b4 Archived 2017-05-10 at the Wayback Machine
- Michael Ondaatje (1997). In the Skin of a Lion. Vintage International. p. 239. ISBN 0679772669.
- Michael Ondaatje (1997). In the Skin of a Lion. Vintage International. p. 203. ISBN 0679772669.
- Dennis Duffy (Summer 2001). "Furnishing the Pictures: Arthur S. Goss, Michael Ondaatje and the Imag(in)ing of Toronto". Journal of Canadian Studies. Archived from the original on 2016-03-05. Retrieved 2013-01-26.
In the tunnel under Lake Ontario two men shake hands on an incline of mud. Beside them a pickaxe and a lamp, their dirt-streaked faces pivoting to look towards the camera. For a moment, while the film receives the image, everything is still, the other tunnel workers silent. Then Arthur Goss, the city photographer, packs up his tripod and glass plates, unhooks the cord of lights that creates a vista of open tunnel behind the two men, walks with his equipment the fifty yards to the ladder, and climbs out into sunlight.
- "In the Skin of a Lion". City of Toronto Archives. Archived from the original on 2013-05-13. Retrieved 2013-01-26.
On a visit to the City of Toronto Archives, students will see archival photographs recording the construction of the Bloor Street Viaduct and the R. C. Harris filtration plant, the two major settings in In the Skin of a Lion.
- "In the Skin of a Lion". Project Bookmark Canada: Exhibits. Archived from the original on 2016-12-02. Retrieved 2016-12-01.
External links
- Mash Magazine (2000). Where Bakers are Heroes. mashmagazine.com.
- Michael Ondaatje (1987). In the Skin of a Lion. McClelland and Stewart. ISBN 9780307776631. Retrieved 2013-01-26.