Praise for Hollywood North
“Libling’s assured, quietly menacing debut, based on his World Fantasy Award-nominated novella of the same title [Hollywood North], is steeped in bittersweet childhood nostalgia and coming-of-age foibles. . . . The leisurely telling belies the hint of evil simmering just below the town’s almost aggressively mundane surface, and there are a few surprises in store. Fans of Stand by Me and the like will find much to enjoy.”
—Publishers Weekly
“A beautifully deceptive mystery and fantasy noir novel. The book is filled with humor and heartbreak and great homages to classic films. While immersed in this Hollywood North, I felt like I was watching a mesmerizing movie unfold.”
—Sheila Williams, editor of Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine
“I don’t use the word ‘brilliant’ promiscuously, never have, never will, but with Michael Libling’s wonderful first novel I use it very comfortably. For another reader, Hollywood North might be simply ‘ingenious’ or ‘charming’ or ‘outrageously engaging’, but I believe it’s more than that—a novel that film buffs will love, along with anyone living in a society with the hand of popular culture upon them as baptism or drowning (or both). Yes, it’s charming and human and light-hearted in its seriousness, and clever and rich with a film-lover’s allusions, nods and hats-off; but that’s another matter. One of the best first novels I’ve read in a decade.”
—Bruce McAllister, author of Dream Baby and The Village Sang to the Sea
“Hollywood North, perhaps the cleverest use of the so-called unreliable narrator that I have ever seen outside of Nabokov or perhaps Evan S. Connell Jr., is also so devastating as to go far beyond the clever. Michael Libling’s first novel is the work of a prodigy with no reference to age and it explores the darkness of human complexity with bravura.”
—Barry Malzberg, author of The Bend at the End of the Road and Breakfast in the Ruins
“A simultaneously heartwarming and heartbreaking coming-of-age story set in the small town of Trenton, Ontario, against the backdrop of a little known chapter of Canada’s cinematic past. Michael Libling is to be celebrated for this gem of a book.”
—Maude Barlow, activist and author of Blue Gold and Boiling Point
“Hollywood North is an Orca of a novel, sleek and playful, short chapters and brief sentences that hit with explosive force and open up its other side, the Killer Whale, rising from the deep, throwing itself on Antarctic ice floes, crushing penguins and sea-lions and maybe a blubberfest with a walrus. This is a work of singular beauty, a paean to popular culture, to guilty pleasures, and to the mounds of trivia behind which the truth lies.”
—Clark Blaise, author of Then And Now, Time Lord and The Meagre Tarmac
“In Hollywood North, Michael Libling spins a tale of movies and memories, nightmares and nostalgia, with such a frightening secret at its core, that you’ll understand why, even though you can go home again, you might end up wishing you didn’t.”—Ian Rogers, author of Every House Is Haunted
“As a rabid fan of Michael Libling’s short stories, I could not wait to get my grubby mitts on a copy of Hollywood North, his long-awaited first novel. I was not disappointed. Once I started, I could not put it down. . . . Michael Libling has a keen memory for the insights and obsessions of boys growing up oddballs in an era of widespread conformity. He writes of their triumphs, terrors, and heartbreaks with an enviable breeziness. But, like a cherry-red hot rod idling in the street at midnight, that slick surface hides a throbbing pulsebeat of dread you feel deep in your chest. When you hop aboard, you’re in for a thrilling ride, but there’s no guarantee you’ll come back in one piece. Or at all. . . . Hollywood North is the most heartbreaking and chilling novel I’ve read in a very long time. Gus and Jack would file this find under X, for Excellent.”
—William Shunn, author of The Accidental Terrorist
“Who cares about Trenton, Ontario, the early home to Canada’s film industry? Or about Jack, Annie, and Gloomy Gus? You will after you read page one of this unpredictable novel and get sucked into it like I did.”
—Gordon Van Gelder, publisher of the Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction and editor of Welcome to Dystopia
“I devoured this harrowing, disturbing, deeply moving tale of loss and redemption set against a backdrop of young love and vanished cinematic history. As with the very best movies, I walked out at the end shaken, changed, grateful.”
—Paul Witcover, author of The Watchman of Eternit
Hollywood North
A Novel in Six Reels
Michael Libling
To Pat,
the first girl I ever met
who read the same books I did.
Later, she read my stories, too,
and somehow still married me.
She is, by far, the best part of my story.
In memory of my parents,
the original Bert and Mollie,
who in the unlikeliest of plot twists
made Trenton their home
and the Theatre Bar their business.
I hope they know how much they gave me.
Nigh upon the Quinte, abreast the River Trent,
Abides my dear sweet Trenton, where my youth was spent.
Perfidious rabble a-hounding, ere my forefathers fled,
Royalists and Loyalists, to the British Crown they pledged.
—Agnes Meyers Johns, from Nigh Upon the Quinte, Lost Poems of the Dominion (1921)
Cafés and shops and industries.
Airbase, schools and charities.
Fires and floods and jeopardies.
Together we rise from tragedies.
Front Street, King Street, Dundas, too,
Stroll around, check out what’s new!
Sail the Quinte, hike Hanna woods,
Cannon on Pelion, where Champlain stood.
That’s my Trenton, my neighbourhood.
—Darrell Minden, Jr., from Together We Rise, Honourable Mention, Trenton Office of Tourism Song Competition (1982)
Based on true events
(As They Say)
First Reel
One
1988 and I was on the 3:10 to Yuma
with Jack, a girl, and Frankie Laine
The lawyer didn’t need to ask me twice. Any reason to get out of Winnipeg in January was reason enough. Even if it sent me home. “It’ll be worth your while,” he said. By then, I guess, curiosity outweighed the fear, and my death instinct had kicked in.
The train was rolling as I clambered into the car, my bag thrust out front as I cast about for a window seat. Last to board, my odds were slim. It wasn’t the view so much as the comfort I was after. I had two days of sitting-up ahead of me. A window would be an extra place to rest my head.
I was halfway down the aisle before Jack tripped me up, pulled what I’d come to call his Orson Welles entrance. Like Harry Lime in The Third Man. A stray cat at his wingtips, a slash of light to reveal the mischief in his eyes. Unexpected, only if you’ve never seen a Welles picture. Or don’t know jack about Jack.
My old pal got right to it, picked up as if nothing had changed between us. “Best kid-without-a-dad movie—The Day the Earth Stood Still or The Seven Faces of Dr. Lao?”
Jack could find me anywhere.
“Hottest TV mom, then? Donna Reed or June Lockhart?”
He was good at that. Finding, I mean.
You know how it is. Everyone has people inside their heads, drop-ins, slugs, and residents. Thoughts of home brought Jack to mine. Even when he wasn’t with me he was with me. I wager he’d have said the same of me.
But this was my end of the story. His entrance
was premature. I swung my bag right through him and forged on to the rear of the car, the four seats facing.
A woman had beaten me to it, her space staked out. Her knee-high leather boots were stowed by the heater. Her stockinged feet were folded under her, taking advantage of the seat adjacent. I apologized for my invasion. “Uh-huh,” she said, dragged her briefcase from my newly claimed territory, the bench opposite, and returned to the paperback tucked close to her chin. Women Who Love Too Much by Robin Norwood.
She was younger than me, though not by much. Thirty-three, thirty-four. A toss-and-tease blonde. Business professional sporty. Petite. Ex-figure skater relegated to coaching—a fantasy I could run with. And I did.
My thing for women on trains goes back to Frankie Laine and 3:10 to Yuma. Not the theme he sang for the movie, but the radio version, where Frankie falls hard for this girl with “golden hair,” and then moans the whole song through because he lets her exit the train without a peep between them, even as her eyes bid him “a sad goodbye.” Great singer, that Frankie, and thick as a rump roast.
Jack persisted. “What about Gene Tierney in Leave Her to Heaven? Now there was a woman on a train, hoo-boy!”
I could have punched him in the face. He knew it, too.
The train was stopped. I wasn’t sure where we were or how long I’d been dozing. Nothing but moonlit snow on either side of Canada’s acclaimed middle of nowhere. My travelling companion glanced up from her book, sympathized with my confusion. “They’re clearing drifts from the tracks again,” she said. “Last I heard, we’ll be a half-day late into Toronto.”
I checked my watch, feigned like-minded annoyance. She had places to be and zero time to waste and I had rarely seen a woman like her with patience for the train, least of all the entire stretch in coach. I could have sworn she’d read my mind: “I was on Air Canada Flight 797,” she said, assessing my degree of cluelessness before expanding. “The plane that caught fire a few years back? June 2, 1983? Dallas . . . Montreal?”
“Oh, yeah. Of course.” In truth, I did and mostly didn’t. How many accidents and disasters is a person obligated to remember, anyhow? I was full up, thank you very much.
“We made an emergency landing in Cincinnati. Eighteen of us got out. But twenty-three . . . it was horrific . . . awful . . . you can’t imagine . . . the poor man sitting next to me . . . turned out I’d gone to high school with his daughter. . . .” Tears loomed. She lowered her head, hugged herself till the impulse passed. “I can’t believe it’s coming up on five years. I haven’t flown since. But the way this trip is going . . . could this be any more exhausting?”
“I hate to fly, too,” I said, as trite as anything I’d ever come out with. I should’ve been a walking-talking phrase book of commiseration by then, catastrophe and me, our long and special relationship. Mercifully, she let me off the hook.
“So, what’s waiting for you in Toronto?” she asked.
“A rental car and another hundred miles.”
“Me, it’s our annual sales meeting. I rep for Pfizer in Vancouver.”
I wanted to ask if she’d been a figure skater, but did not. I was as much of a rump roast as Frankie Laine, for Christ’s sake.
“And you, if not Toronto?” she said.
“Trenton.”
“Where the Air Force base is?”
“One claim to fame.”
“You live there?”
“Used to.”
“But you still have family in the town? Friends?”
“Tons,” I said.
“I love going home. The reminiscing and all . . .”
I nodded as if I knew where she was coming from, then shook my head, strummed a heartstring. “This trip, sad to say, it’s for the reading of a will.” The chitchat never lags when you’ve got puppies, babies, or death to turn to.
“Oh, my. I am so sorry. Someone close?”
“No. Not really.”
“Hmm . . .” She dog-eared a page, set her book aside. “You make it sound intriguing.”
“Do I?” Did I? I did.
“Like in the movies—and you’re heir to an unforeseen fortune. A castle in Scotland or something.”
Her eyes were girlfriend blue, ready to love me as soon as despise me. “It’s a long story,” I told her.
“Isn’t it always?” she laughed, as if she’d heard it all and expected to hear more, and Jack, I guess, had heard enough. He tossed up a card from our collection.
Good choice, I thought, and fired back.
“I understand,” Jack said. “Beauty, charm, and plane crash survivor. A woman after your own heart. Too bad she’s not in the script this time out.”
“You don’t know that. She could be the one.”
“There’s only ever been one, you know that.”
“What about ‘a sad goodbye?’”
“There are better Frankie Laine songs.”
“C’mon, Jack. That’s not fair.”
“Let her go, Gus. Let her remember you as you are—the distracted loony who blanked mid-conversation and started yammering aloud to himself. She’ll tell the story to friends, embellish it in parts, describe you as off your meds and supremely disturbed—but not as disturbed as you really are—and promptly forget she ever had the misfortune to cross your path. I’m doing you a favour, man.”
“What if there’s a bridge out up ahead and the train plunges into a ravine and I never get another chance to—”
“You wish you could be that lucky,” Jack said.
“Excuse me? Are you speaking to me?” She was nervous, nursey, like she might whip out a thermometer, a cold compress. “Are you all right? Is something wrong?”
The train lurched. Couplings grumbled down the line.
Jack and me, we came up with the TV Guide blurb together.
1:00 5 HOLLYWOOD NORTH—Movie
After many years away, a man returns to his boyhood home to claim a mysterious inheritance.
I was thirty-seven years old, January of 1988, my future behind me, my past dead ahead.
Two
Jack was the boy who found things
Jack Levin was the boy who found things. When he was eight, a meteorite. When he was nine, a message in a bottle. When he was ten, a gold ring.
Jack made the front page of the Trent Record every time.
LOCAL BOY FINDS METEORITE IN GARDEN
LOCAL BOY FINDS TRAGIC MESSAGE IN BOTTLE
LOCAL BOY FINDS LONG-LAST WEDDING BAND
On school days, boiled eggs, toast soldiers, and the paper were my breakfast, and my mother kept watch to ensure I digested all. “Don’t forget, this is the same breakfast Alexander Graham Bell’s mother gave him,” she’d say, Mr. Bell in regular rotation with Edison, Einstein, and Walt Disney. On weekends, it would be Rice Krispies or Sugar Pops and the paper, which happened to be the same breakfast Winston Churchill’s mother gave him. Either way, Mom promised, “You’ll look back on this some day and thank me.”
I have never stopped looking back. It’s the thank-you that’s been tough.
My mother was like most mothers. She believed me to be a better person than I would ever know myself to be.
The news was local. Fires. Fender benders. Drownings. Thefts. Fires. Drownings. Public intoxication. Fires. Death notices. Drownings. Pee Wee hockey. Fires. I skimmed the pages, bluffed interest with an intensity that swelled Mom’s heart. Oh, I was good, all right. She’d get downright soppy as she gushed to friends about her wonderful son and his passion for the world about him. “So much like his dad, you have no idea.”
Had she quizzed me, she’d have seen I retained no specifics, save for the life and times of Superman, Beetle Bailey, Mandrake the Magician, and Jack Levin.
We were spiritual bookends, Jack and me. That’s how I saw it, anyhow. He found things. I wanted things. The front page was of no value to me unless he was on it.
“Quite the adventurer, isn’t he?” Mom observed from her post behind my right shoulder. It was Jack�
�s debut. The meteorite story. June 1958. “You can tell even now he’s going to grow up to be a somebody. Just like you.” My mother’s endorsement of Jack should have had me running the other way. Her previous candidates for playmates had ranged from co-workers’ nephews to the sundry spawn of checkout line acquaintances. The ensuing playtimes were footnotes from The Book of the Damned. I’d learned to dismiss her nominees out of hand.
“I know him,” I said, my enthusiasm contained. “I’ve seen him at school.”
“Are you friends? You should invite him over.”
“He’s older. Second grade.”
“You can learn a lot from older friends. Look at me and Dottie. If not for her, do you think I would have had the courage to go for my promotion at work? She’s been my rock.” Mom and Dottie Lange worked at the Unemployment Insurance Office. They would remain best friends until the day Dottie died, which would arrive sooner than either of them could have expected.
My mother had it wrong, of course. Jack was already a somebody. Best I could claim was envy.
“He’s got enough friends,” I said.
I was only a year younger than Jack, but still I was in awe. From the first photo I saw of him he struck me as heroic, as if he himself had grabbed the comet’s tail, hopped aboard, and chiselled out his prize. It might’ve been his smile, a cryptic quirk suggestive of more daring feats to come. He was squatting, pointing to the spot where the meteorite had been discovered, yet I would’ve bet you a million the photographer had tied him down to get the shot, Jack’s unruly hair a stirring glimpse of anarchy in a town torn between Brylcreem and brush cut.
The town was Trenton. Still is.
The Ontario Trenton, not the New Jersey one.
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