Hardcover
480 Pages, 6.15 x 9.5 x 1.25 in
December 22, 2009
Random House of Canada
0307356779
9780307356772
From the Publisher
An extraordinary debut novel of love that survives the fires of
hell and transcends the boundaries of time.
On a burn ward, a man lies between living and dying, so disfigured
that no one from his past life would even recognize him. His only
comfort comes from imagining various inventive ways to end his
misery. Then a woman named Marianne Engel walks into his hospital
room, a wild-haired, schizophrenic sculptress on the lam from the
psych ward upstairs, who insists that she knows him - that she has
known him, in fact, for seven hundred years. She remembers vividly
when they met, in another hospital ward at a convent in medieval
Germany, when she was a nun and he was a wounded mercenary left to
die. If he has forgotten this, he is not to worry: she will prove
it to him.
And so Marianne Engel begins to tell him their story, carving away
his disbelief and slowly drawing him into the orbit and power of a
word he''d never uttered: love.
From the Jacket
"An epic page-turner. Davidson's writing is so vivid and graphic,
it will give you the chills."
- People
"There is an admirable clarity to his prose, a careful avoidance of
the kind of turgid or melodramatic sentences one finds in lesser
writers….The Gargoyle does not
disappoint….Sweeping, intergenerational, wholly implausible,
unapologetically melodramatic, and absolutely absorbing. While
reading it I rolled my eyes more times than I care to remember; it
was, at the same time, impossible to put down.."
- The Globe and Mail
"Following close behind David Wroblewski's The Story of
Edgar Sawtelle and Brunonia Barry's The Lace
Reader, The Gargoyle is another in this
summer's extraordinary series of million-dollar debuts from unknown
writers that combine elements of mystery and mysticism….I dare you
to read this without flinching. It's as engrossing as it is
gruesome, the kind of horror you watch with one eye closed."
- The Washington Post
"You want to be lost in its pages, immersed in the unfolding tale
of the human gargoyle and a flesh and blood wraith. In the final
analysis, the real tragedy of this book is that it ends."
- New York Daily News
"Mr. Davidson paints an engaging if not scintillating
tableau."
- The Wall Street Journal
"It's wildly romantic, a la Diana Gabaldon, but anchored by a
21st-century sensibility that owes more to Chuck Palahniuk."
- Winnipeg Free Press
"In the first 4 1/2 pages of The Gargoyle, it's
clear that Davidson can spin an electrifying yarn."
- The Vancouver Sun
"A wild page-turner and a boldly impudent work that flirts with the
trappings of gothic romances, historical novels and fantasies while
skirting their clichés and remaining defiantly unique."
- Edmonton Sun
"Davidson's debut is storytelling at its finest, featuring a lively
assortment of characters and events that combine in a gripping
drama that will keep readers' attention through the very last page.
An essential summer book; highly recommended."
- Library Journal
"[A] deliriously ambitious debut novel."
- Kirkus (starred review)
"I was blown away by Andrew Davidson's The
Gargoyle. . . . A hypnotic, horrifying, astonishing novel
that manages, against all odds, to be redemptive."
- Sara Gruen, author of Water for Elephants
"After 44 years of reading anything I could get my hands
on, including Moby Dick, reading Andrew Davidson's
debut novel made me feel as if I were done. The
Gargoyle had it all - all I'd ever wanted or needed from a
book….[The] characters are rich and knowing, the imagery
breathtaking, the voice and rhythm unfailing."
- The Raabe Review
About the Author
Andrew Davidson grew up in Pinawa, Manitoba, and graduated in 1995
from the University of British Columbia with a B.A. in English
literature. He has worked as a teacher of English in Japan, where
he has lived on and off since the late 1990s, and as a writer of
English lessons for Japanese websites. The
Gargoyle, the product of seven years' worth of research
and composition, is his first novel.
From the Author
You spent seven years writing The Gargoyle, a novel begun
in your thirties. What was your starting point?
When I first moved to Japan, teaching English and writing
for Japanese Web sites, I wrote a series of letters to a close
friend. In these letters, a character started to pop up in the
correspondence, taking it over whenever she could wrestle away
control of my pen. She arrived with wild hair and blue-green eyes,
ranting in front of a church, and her name arrived with her:
Marianne Engel. She just kept jabbing at me until I consented to
give her more attention. It was clear that she would inhabit a
novel.
At the time I was struck with a curiosity about the treatment of
severe burn survivors. I recognize that this might seem somewhat
specialized and peculiar, but it was directly related to an idea I
had for the starting point of a story. I imagine that everyone has
had a relationship end and experienced the feeling of having "been
burned." It is a clichéd image, to be sure, but it is a cliché
because it is apt and true. I was intrigued by the idea of a
relationship that did not end with the feeling of being burned, but
one that began with such a feeling - taken to the most literal
level.
How did you tackle the research for The
Gargoyle?
The story was not written and then supplemented with research as
needed; no, I read widely and sometimes a single bit of new
information twisted my novel in another direction. My research has
been almost entirely based in written works, ranging from
encyclopedias of medieval German life to medical journals on the
latest burn research. As of this writing (July 2008), I have never
been to Germany; in fact, I have never been to continental Europe.
Similarly, I have never been to a burn ward.
An example of wandering research influencing the novel came in the
entire portion of the book set in medieval Germany. There was no
original intention to take the story to this place and time; the
first draft had absolutely no mention of Sister Marianne's life in
the Middle Ages. It was not until I had been working on the novel
for a year that I came across a reference to a monastery called
Engelthal. As I mentioned, Marianne Engel arrived with her name
fully intact, and while I knew her last name meant "angel" in
German, I had never heard of the monastery. The medieval German
section ultimately came into being because the character who had
intruded into my personal letters arrived with the name Engel, and
because I found the name of the monastery - "Engelthal" or "Valley
of the Angels" - quite charming.
During his youth, the novel's narrator found solace in his
local library. When you were a child, was the same true for
you?
I was the boy who bicycled down to the library and
returned with my basket filled with books. I went through dozens
each week; there was nothing better. Subject matter ran from
biographies to science to myths to serious fiction - everything was
of interest. When I was not reading, I liked to sit in the corner
and listen to the adults talk, and I most enjoyed the tall tales.
The more certain I was that the story was a lie, the more I enjoyed
the telling of it.
When did you realize you wanted to become a
writer?
Through my teen years, I concentrated on playing hockey. I was,
after all, a Canadian boy. I was good but not nearly good enough.
By the time I was sixteen, I realized that there would be no future
in the National Hockey League for me. The timing coincided with an
exceptional high school English teacher and from that age forward,
all I ever wanted to do professionally was write.
You've experienced the sort of debut most writers dream of,
with foreign rights sold in more than twenty countries and
phenomenal pre-publication praise. What advice do you have for
aspiring novelists?
I have taken many courses on writing and was often told that it is
best to write about what one knows. I have always found this to be
the worst possible advice. I would suggest that one should always
write about what one wants to know, because there will be weeks,
months, or even years of research. It is essential to find
something that can hold one's interest for such periods.
The process by which I write is to overwrite and then reduce. The
novel as it stands, at approximately 154,000 words, was reduced
from more than one million words that I wrote while trying to
discover what I was writing about.
Bookclub Guide
1. Dante's Inferno
First published in 1314, this epic poem is the first
"song" in Dante Alighieri's three-part Divine Comedy; subsequent
canticles describe Purgatory and Paradise. In The
Inferno, Virgil guides Dante through the underworld,
comprising nine concentric circles that represent varying degrees
of condemnation, from the unbaptized in Limbo to traitorous Satan
at the center.
Dante begins his tour of hell on Good Friday, 1300, the suggested
day and year of Marianne's birth. The day of Christ's crucifixion,
Good Friday makes additional appearances in The
Gargoyle: It is Sister Christina's birthday and the day of
the narrator's car accident.
Like Dante, The Gargoyle's narrator begins his
journey in the woods, at the age of thirty-five. Contemplation of
suicide occurs in early passages of The Inferno as
well as The Gargoyle.
For Discussion: In The Inferno,
condemned souls receive punishments that correspond to their sins.
The Gargoyle's narrator loses his ability to
consummate sex, but he retains his ability to feel intense desire.
What other forms of hell does he suffer? What do Dante's images
signify to Marianne? What sort of tailor-made suffering might Dante
have invented for you? What do a society's beliefs regarding the
afterlife say about that society's values in general?
2. The Medieval Church
The founding of the Dominican monastery Engelthal occurred
as described in The Gargoyle. In its strictest
definition, "monastery" can refer to a religious retreat for both
women and men, though Engelthal nuns did not preach as friars did.
The nuns' predecessors, the beguines, were also sometimes seen as a
threat to ecclesiastical authority. The women who worked in the
renowned Engelthal scriptorium in the fourteenth century are said
to have produced more extant texts than any other religious house
of their era.
At the time of Father Sunder's death in 1328, he and Brother
Heinrich had lived together for thirty-eight years. Father Sunder
was said to have had very special status, and was called a "pope in
heaven" with the Power of the Keys, effectively granting him the
authority to forgive any sin at any time.
Heinrich Seuse's extreme, self-inflicted physical suffering
captures a medieval Christian approach to the opposition between
body and spirit, and to the desire for God and man to achieve a
metaphysical union. Meister Eckhart, who explored similar
questions, was declared a heretic under trial by Pope John XXII.
The Three Masters are derived from Heinrich Seuse's attempts to
control his tongue. He called on three spiritual masters, Father
Dominic, St. Arsenius, and St. Bernard, and would not speak without
receiving their permission in a vision.
Marianne's assertion in Chapter Five that "God is a circle whose
center is everywhere and whose circumference is nowhere" was
commonly invoked by medieval theologians.
Continually persecuted by religious and political entities, the
Jews of medieval Germany lived in two worlds: one of segregated
self-governance and Talmudic codes, and one of utter dependence on
the whims of papal authority.
For Discussion: How does medieval Catholicism
compare to the other forms of faith - religious or otherwise -
captured in the novel? In what ways does contemporary society still
struggle with the tandem between body and soul? Was it easier for
you to relate to Marianne's mysticism or to the narrator's atheism?
3. Gargoyles
The legend describing the creation of the first gargoyle,
recounted in Chapter Three, is just one of many versions. Andrew
Davidson invented the battle scene between Romanus and La
Gargouille; it does not appear in published legends.
The concept of using a sculpture depicting an animal's mouth to
divert water from buildings dates well before medieval Europe.
Ancient Egyptian and Greek architecture is rife with apparatuses
that would qualify as "gargoyles."
As Marianne says in Chapter Twenty, medieval gargoyles were indeed
sometimes painted bright colors. Oranges, reds, and greens were
popular, and some gargoyles were gilded. They were made from a
variety of materials, including limestone, marble, lead, or metal,
and they usually weighed several hundred pounds.
Scholars debate the intended message behind medieval gargoyles.
Perhaps they were meant to ward off evil spirits, or to depict evil
forces. Early Gothic examples easily convey a moral lesson, while
later ones can frequently be interpreted as comical.
For Discussion: In Chapter Five, Marianne
describes herself as "a vessel that water is poured into and
splashes out of, a flowing circle between God and the gargoyles and
me." In Chapter Sixteen, the narrator realizes that Marianne "loved
[the gargoyles] out of the stone." What mandate is she fulfilling
in both of these descriptions? What makes Marianne's mandate
relevant to the modern world? What traits does the narrator share
with medieval gargoyles?
4. Legendary Lovers
The author incorporated the four Greek classical elements
of the physical world when writing Marianne's legends: Sei lived as
a glassblower (Air) and died by being buried alive (Earth).
Victoria lived as a farmwoman (Earth) and died by drowning (Water).
Sigurðr lived as a Viking (Water) and died in a burning longhouse
(Fire). Francesco lived as an ironworker (Fire) and died by
breathing in the Plague (Air).
Brandeis and his fellow mercenaries served during a tumultuous time
for the Holy Roman Empire. Between 1314 and 1347, Louis the
Bavarian served as Duke of Bavaria, the German king, and the Holy
Roman Emperor, meeting with constant resistance from the papacy
(including excommunication).
Marianne's fairy tales are Davidson's inventions. Though the
novel's depictions of Engelthal incorporate many figures from true
history, none of the incarnations of Marianne and the narrator are
based on such characters.
Marianne's copy of The Inferno was found among the
possessions of the archer Niccolò, later revealed to be the father
of metalworker Francesco.
Sei is stung by the Asian giant hornet, the world's largest wasp
(and among the deadliest).
Sigurðr's "fine boat grave" refers to a highly honorary burial
style used in the Vendel era and by the Anglo-Saxons, the
Merovingians, the Vikings, and occasionally the Ancient Egyptians.
This form of burial was thought to enable passage to Valhalla. In
Norse mythology, the paradise of Valhalla is the great hall where
war heroes greet the afterlife. The less fortunate are relegated to
a cold, dismal kingdom of death ruled by the goddess Hel.
Tom's ill-fated voyage is alluded to in the story of Sigurðr and
Einarr, when Bragi stumbles off his sleeping bench during the fire
while the floor seems "to lurch like a boat deck during a
storm."
In Chapter Seven, Marianne tells the narrator that he must do
nothing for her in order to prove his love. This foreshadows her
final scene on the beach in the novel's closing passages.
For Discussion: Throughout each liaison, how do
the novel's lovers honor their fate? In each case, who or what is
the greatest threat to their happiness? Do you agree with Meister
Eckhart's descriptions of love and death in the novel's epigraph?
Which of Marianne's tales was the most memorable for you?
5. Linguistic Curiosities
Translated into English, Sei's name means "pure" or
"clean."
Bragi's name is derived from the Norse god of poetry.
In Chapter Nine, the narrator wonders whether he can trust Sayuri's
translation of her conversation with Marianne. In fact, he can.
Sayuri gave him a faithful rendering of their words.
The names of the nun-nurses of Engelthal echo those of the nurses
who tend to the narrator in the present time: Mathildis, Elisabeth,
and Constantia versus Maddy, Beth, and Connie.
While the word gargoyle is related to a French word
meaning gargle, the word grotesque (a non-aquatic
gargoyle) is derived from the Old Italian grottesca,
meaning "cave painting," from which the English word
grotto evolved.
Marianne's linguistic abilities are an allusion to the New
Testament's Book of Acts 2:3, in which the apostles speak in
tongues when preaching the gospel.
Gertrud's German translation of the Bible is one of Andrew
Davidson's inventions.
When Sayuri asks the narrator if he is genki, she is
asking him if he is feeling energetic. "Genki desu ka?" is
a common Japanese greeting, essentially asking "Are you feeling
well?"
For Discussion: How does the multilingual aspect
of The Gargoyle shape the novel, giving voice to
the universal aspects of the human experience? How do Marianne's
vignettes offer a testament to the power of words and language?
6. The Gargoyle begins with arguably one of the
most stunning opening scenes in contemporary literature. How was
the author able to make horrifying details alluring? What was your
initial reaction to these images?
7. How were you affected by the narrator's voice and his ability to
address you in an intimate, direct monologue? How did his
storytelling style compare to Marianne's? In what ways did these
tales balance reality and surrealism?
8. Arrows form a recurring symbol throughout the novel. What are
their various uses as tools of war and of love? What makes them
ideal for Marianne's stories?
9. What medical aspects of the narrator's treatment surprised you
the most? Did his gruesome journey change the way you feel about
your own body?
10. How did Marianne's experience of God evolve and mature
throughout her life? How do you personally reconcile the concept of
a loving God and the reality of human suffering?
11. Marianne uses her body as a canvas. What messages does it
convey? How does the narrator "read" bodies before his accident,
both in front of the camera and while picking up less-dazzling
strangers?
12. Discuss the role of ghosts and memory in The
Gargoyle. In what ways does the past repeat itself? How
are the characters shaped by past circumstances? When are their
painful cycles to be broken?
13. What does Marianne's copy of The Inferno
indicate about the value of books beyond their content? In what way
can a book also be an art object, or an artifact of history?
14. Eventually, Nan reveals her own burn scars. What motivates the
novel's healers - including Nan, Marianne, Sayuri, and Gregor? Whom
does the narrator heal?
15. Discuss the role of money throughout The
Gargoyle. What kept Jack honest? What did it mean
for Marianne, a woman, to have far more money than the men in her
life, both in the 14th century and in the contemporary storyline?
16. How did you interpret the narrator's own Dante-esque tour,
described in Chapter Twenty-nine? Was he hallucinating, in the
throes of withdrawal while he kicked the bitchsnake of morphine, or
did he journey to an underworld? Or both? Was Marianne a mere
mortal?
17. The novel closes with Marianne's departure and the marriage of
Gregor and Sayuri. The narrator grapples with guilt, trying to
understand whether he could or should have saved Marianne. What
enabled Gregor and Sayuri to recognize and nurture their love for
one another? What determines whether a relationship will become
exhausted or perpetually revitalized? Is fate or willpower the
greater factor?
18. An old adage, evidenced particularly in Shakespeare's works,
states that a comedy ends with a marriage, while a tragedy ends
with a death. Given that The Gargoyle ends with
both a marriage and a death, what does it say about the work?