
image by Alex Bowron

image by Alex Bowron
In the spirit of WMADWTD – which, as you may know, is essentially all about storytelling – we’ve been reading folktales to each other – focusing on Canadian content, of course – in the van between destinations and curled up before bedtime. For me, these moments are great practice for public readings I’ll be doing at shows. I performed my first public reading of the tour last night in Kingston, between sets at at AKA (which is an old house downtown).
To an intimate, enthusiastic crowd, I read excerpts from an amazing book I found amongst the donations to our Gargantuan Garage Sale fundraiser: Edith Fowke’s “Folklore of Canada: Tall tales, songs, stories, rhymes, legends and jokes from every corner of Canada”. This book’s got so much amazing content – vernacular tales of Monsters of the West, stupid jokes – and even a short essay about the early development of French-Canadian foodways (which is great cuz one of my tour projects is a food quest of Eastern Canada). Oh and, the storytellers in the book have great names like Mrs. B.S., Alex R. McTavish and Joe Thibadeau.
Here’s a bit from the book, called “The Big Moose”, an Ontario yarn from Joe Thibadeau:
“Well, this big moose. I wanted to get him, and I set down and saddled the track , and I started pulling back on the track, and I pulled the moose right up to me and killed him.”
- Ringer

















