Walkups (novel)

Walkups
Author Lance Blomgren
Cover artist Charles Chalmers
Country Canada
Language English
Genre Literary fiction
Science Fiction
Documentary
Publisher Conundrum Press, Editions Adage
Publication date
1 October 2000, 1 April 2007, 30 May 2009
Media type Print (paperback)
Pages 114 (paperback)
ISBN 0-9685161-7-3
OCLC 44943608
813/.6 21
LC Class PR9199.3.B545 W45 2000
Followed by Corner Pieces

Walkups is the debut novella by the Canadian author Lance Blomgren, published by Conundrum Press. The first printing quickly sold out following its release, having already been excerpted in various magazines and on the internet. It was followed by a companion piece, Corner Pieces in 2004. The novel has since been translated into French by Éditions Adage, translated by Elizabeth Robert, and published as Walkups: Scènes de la vie Montréalaise. A second printing of the novella was released by conundrum press in May 2009.

The title evokes the typical street-side apartment living of large eastern North American cities in general, and the winding staircases typical to Montreal in particular.

Content

The format and structure of the novella is unconventional, written in extremely short chapters with only two recurring characters and interspersed with enigmatic black and white photographs taken by the author, and artist Charles Chalmers.

Walkups is a novella that takes urban architecture—particularly Montreal row-house architecture—as its primary subject. All chapters, titled only by an address, take place with the walls of different apartments, while the one recurring address, referred to only as the Apts d'amours returns us to the central narrative of the unnamed narrator and his love interest, Jane, a biology student who lives upstairs from him in the same building.

As literary critic Kevin Connolly points out in his article on Walkups in Toronto's eye weekly, Walkups shares some similarities with work of Mark Danielewski and Roman Polanski's film, The Tenant.[1] The novel depicts the claustrophobia and cabin fever associated with cold northern climes, as well as the deep psychological weight of personal and public history as represented by our mundane living spaces.

On one hand Walkups acts as a kind of tour guide to the various neighbourhoods of Montreal and a documentary of various, while simultaneously telling a story of a love affair within the walls of an apartment building that is seemingly alive.

References

  1. Kevin Connolly, "Living Apartments", eye weekly Toronto, 2001
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