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Give Me Your Answer by K. D. Miller  

Give Me Your Answer is K.D. Miller’s second collection of short stories. The book is made up of twelve stories which together trace the evolving life of the protagonist, Daisy Chandler, from childhood to marriage and subsequently to divorce and a deepening religious conviction.

Give Me Your Answer is K.D. Miller’s second collection of short stories. The book is made up of twelve stories which together trace the evolving life of the protagonist, Daisy Chandler, from childhood to marriage and subsequently to divorce and a deepening religious conviction.

First as a painter, then as a writer, Daisy struggles to understand her family, her friends, her lovers and herself. With one foot in the fifties and the other on the millennium, Daisy bears witness to herself and her companions with unflinching honesty and a wickedly irreverent sense of humour.

These stories further reveal K.D. Miller’s huge talent. Her language is crisp and precise and even the most sombre of the stories is flecked with her trademark wit and humour.

prize

2000—Upper Canada Writers Craft Award,
Shortlisted

‘I was never a child,’ asserts K.D. Miller, author of two collections of short fiction from The Porcupine’s Quill. ‘Or at least, the child in me was ‘‘killed’’ sometime before my conscious memory kicks in.’ No particular traumatic event or series of events brought this about, Miller says. In fact, her childhood sounds boringly routine. Miller grew up in Hamilton, Ontario in the 1950’s world of housewives and breadwinners, of pink plastic radios in the kitchen and workbenches in the basement, of fathers who hardly spoke and mothers who couldn’t stop talking. All of this finds its way into her stories, along with the feeling ‘of being different, of not quite fitting in, of being here on sufferance,’ and the distinct sense that ‘the world could be a dark and menacing place.’

In ‘The Other Voice’, the story that begins Give Me Your Answer, the child witnesses the aftermath of a car accident in which a child was hit, maybe killed. She can tell that the woman who ‘sings’ about how sad it is isn’t sad at all, more gloating at the punishment meted out to errant child and careless adult, both ‘getting what’s coming to them’ in an Old Testament, righteous kind of way. The ‘other voice’ of the title is the little girl’s own voice, blunt with reality, almost unrecognized as her own, that gives the lie to the innocence of children.

Of her influences Miller says, ‘I’ve always been attracted to anything Gothic. As a child I must have read Jane Eyre about eleven times, and I was morbidly fascinated by the works of Poe. I still love the southern Gothic writers: Eudora Welty ... Tennessee Williams, Flannery O’Connor.’ Margaret Laurence was an early, powerful influence. ‘When I first began to think of myself as a writer, I got cartloads of permission from Margaret Laurence. Permission to write, permission to think of myself as a writer, permission to pause and dwell on what is small and ordinary.’ Miller remembers reading Laurence’s A Bird in the House and suddenly realizing it was all right to write about everyday things, ‘the way the light came in the mother’s window,’ and make it special. And indeed Miller’s stories are full of the small details that render an ordinary scene significant.

Previous review quote

‘... I found myself laughing frequently.... Miller takes the right turns and sustains her narratives without tricks or complications ... if K.D. Miller can evoke such feelings in a first collection, I am certainly looking forward to her second.’

—Malahat Review


authorPic

K.D. Miller’s stories and essays have appeared in numerous magazines and have been nominated for the Journey Prize and the National Magazine Award for fiction (1997). In 1999 she was a runner-up in the PRISM international short fiction contest. Two collections of her stories have been published -- A Litany in Time of Plague (PQL 1994), and Give Me Your Answer (PQL 1999) -- with the latter being short-listed for the Upper Canada Brewing Company’s inaugural Writers’ Craft Award. A collection of personal essays, Holy Writ: A Writer Reflects on Creation and Imagination was published in 2001, and nominated for the sixteenth annual TORGI Talking Book of the Year Award. In 2010, K.D. Miller published her first novel, Brown Dwarf, with Biblioasis. K.D. Miller lives and teaches writing courses in Toronto.

For more information please visit the Author’s website »

The Porcupine's Quill would like to acknowledge the support of the Ontario Arts Council and the Canada Council for the Arts for our publishing program. The financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund (CBF) is also gratefully acknowledged.

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FICTION / Short Stories

FICTION / Literary

ISBN-13: 9780889842083

Publication Date: 1999-09-15

Dimensions: 8.75 in x 5.56 in

Pages: 252

Price: $18.95