Cat’s article on vaccine avoidance has brought out the very vocal anti-vaxers and complaints to advertisers of the newspaper. The paper is at risk. Those who dislike the paper call it the Shill and Racket. A group of them known as “the convoy” are camping out on the edge of the town. They had been ardent supporters of “The Convoy” that shut down Ottawa for weeks during Covid.
The conference is featuring the world’s best selling poet, Clarity K. She is a striking woman wearing a “flowing ivory cloak with an enormous hood” and “glowing silver hair surrounded a smooth, youthful face”.
The cloak is made of the “plushest cashmere” which was ethically sourced from a small collective of women in Nepal. It is her Creativity Cocoon.
Marian is furious that an interviewer cancelled their interview about her new book, Grit and Gumption, to go to see Clarity K “giving an impromptu lesson in free verse in the Canoe Salon”.
Marian may be 72 but her energy abounds. She only eats carbs once a month and on her husband’s birthday. She was a management consultant, “cable news pundit on issues of gender and work” and a bestselling author on “midlife empowerment”.
Bliss and Bree founded Welcome, Goddess and post very popular podcasts. Bliss, at least, has succumbed to the health conspiracy theorists of the pandemic.
There is chaos at the retreat when Bliss is found dead at the base of a famed scenic lookout near the resort hosting the conference.
Another journalist from Cat’s paper interviews “weepers” - upset witnesses to a disturbing event.
Clarity hosts a group to SkyWord in memory of Bliss. It is an amazing scene. Participants light sparklers and spell out a message in the sky in the streaks of light created by the sparklers. Even more remarkable, with a camera you “can create still images from the long exposure setting and then use an app to flip them so that you can read them”.
Inspector Cheryl Bell is not one to engage in flights of fancy. (I borrow the phrase for this post from fellow blogger and friend, Margot Kinberg, who has used it in her blog for special, often whimsical, posts.) Bell is carefully assembling information from what happened on the night Bliss died.
Cat interviews Clarity after the death of Bliss. Clarity wants “to contribute to a healing dialogue” and get on record she “had no knowledge of the tragic events of the last few days”.
There is a frightening video circulated in which Cat is making wild threats against Mayor Gerry Halloran. She is shocked as she never made the threats. Fortunately, it is quickly exposed as a deepfake. We are entering a world where video is less and less reliable.
Though Cat is 45 her relationship with her mother is fraught with issues both past and present.
It turns out the Welcome, Goddess world has as much corporate intrigue and conflict as any other large business.
A white board is needed by the journalists at the Quill to list all the suspects.
There is constant irony, subtle sarcasm and wit through the book.
It reminded me of the conference in Susan Juby’s book by subtly mocking current societal passions and Conor Kerr’s biting portrayal of the business of indigenous activism.
I was a little disappointed that the authors chose to describe characters from the “convoy” in unflattering physical terms. I appreciated that they do not spare the pretensions of the “wellness” advocates but they are attractive people.
Reading about the Quill & Packet was painful. I have witnessed the decline of a strong local newspaper to oblivion. I wrote for the Melfort Journal for 38 years. Now it is a free newspaper with barely a story on life in Melfort.
I enjoyed Widows and Orphans. It is a well written book that credibly examines issues related to wellness and science in the midst of a strong mystery. The ending is excellent.