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In Search of Innocence

I find a long-lost film-maker, a long-lost painting and (maybe) a treasure trove of Vancouver’s beat history

Writing a book is a little like having a child.  The child grows up, ventures out into the world and does all sorts of things that surprise you.   I was reminded of this quite vividly when I unexpectedly received an email from PG Forest.  He introduced himself by saying that his father was Leonard Forest, who directed a National Film Board documentary in which Curt Lang briefly appears.  PG Forest lived in Montreal but wrote that he would be visiting Vancouver for a few days and wondered if we could chat. Of course I was curious and suggested we meet for coffee.

I knew exactly which film he meant—In Search of Innocence, a haunting  movie about artists, writers and musicians in beat-era Vancouver.  Leonard Forest, an Acadian and the director of French programming at the NFB, made the film about 1964. (There’s a French version too, called À la recherche de l’innocence).

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In Pursuit of a Free Spirit

Curt was a friend of mine for about 12 years.  But this is not in itself a reason to write a book about someone, so  I’d like to say a few words about  why I was moved to write At the World’s Edge.

Curt was a person who did many different things, he was a beat, he wrote poetry and published it, he painted and exhibited his paintings in the Vancouver Art Gallery, he started a bookstore, which became MacLeod’s Books and still exists today, he built boats, he salvaged logs, he was a fisherman, a photographer and high tech entrepreneur.  So his life gives us a unique window into Vancouver’s changing economic history.  This in itself is interesting but there is more.

Curt was something very unique; a free spirit, a latter-day Odysseus. Read more »

Curt’s Poem

It is book launch eve.  Of course, I am nervous! I am reflecting back on the journey that this book has been.  I will miss it.  For some reason, I find myself thinking of one of Curt’s poems.  It is untitled and undated.  My best guess is that he wrote it sometime in the mid sixties:

If you want to see someone smile,

Send out your mind, secretly

like a thief,

Gently like a butterfly,

Silently like a loving glance.

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In Conversation

Michael is a writer, who like me, lives in North Vancouver.  He was a neighbour of Curt’s friend, Fred Douglas, and curious about my book.  I gave him  copy of my manuscript and on a Saturday afternoon, he came over with his tape recorder and we chatted about Curt and the process of writing about him.  To hear us,  just click Claudia in conversation with Michael:

The book is done!

I’m happy to announce that I have finally finished At the World’s Edge.

On the left, is the cover–designed by Jan Westendorp.  It combines a picture of Curt snapped sometime in the late sixties with a photo of Vancouver’s  Granville Street which Curt took in 1972.  This was part of a mammoth street photography project Curt undertook.  The National Gallery in Ottawa has a few of Curt’s images, but the vast majority (approximately 12,000) now reside in the Vancouver Public Library–Special Collections.   If you click on the previous link and search for Curt Lang, you will find the library has made a few photos accessible electronically.  At the World’s Edge, however,  includes many images that are not available elsewhere.

I was rather amused a few weeks ago, when I called the Vancouver Public Library’s Special Collections to get some information about Curt’s photography.  “Oh,” said the librarian,  “We have ordered a new book about Curt Lang.  It will be arriving in the fall.  Perhaps that might help you.”

‘Who else could be writing a book about Curt?’ I wondered.  ‘And why had I heard nothing about this project?’ Then the penny dropped.

“Is the book called, At the World’s Edge, by any chance?” I asked the librarian.  After a minute’s silence, she replied, “Yes that’s it.”

“That’s my book!” I exclaimed.  “So it’s not going to help me, unfortunately.”

Jan is still working on the design of the book’s interior–combining images and text.  I should have more to report about that in a couple of weeks.  I am very pleased that Greg Lang, Curt’s brother, has provided an introduction and David Beers, publisher of the on line magazine Tyee,  is writing a foreword.  Dan Francis, BC historian and the author/editor of more than twenty books had this to say about At the World’s Edge: “Lang was a pivotal member of Vancouver’s ‘beat generation,’ the hipsters, writers and artists who set themselves against the comfortable pieties of post-war consumer society. Cornwall’s book is a fond recollection of her subject and the times in which he lived.”

Mona Fertig at Mother Tongue Publishing has been arranging a busy fall reading schedule for me.  I will be announcing dates later, but so far,  appearances will include the Vancouver Public Library, the West Vancouver Memorial Library, the Lynn Valley Library,  and the White Rock Library.  If you know an institution,  group (a book club, perhaps, or photography club) that might be interested in a talk or reading, shoot me a comment!