Nuclear Family

By Jean Van Loon
Categories: Literature & Language Studies, Poetry
Series: Hugh MacLennan Poetry Series
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Paperback : 9780228011156, 104 pages, April 2022
Ebook (PDF) : 9780228013556, April 2022
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780228013563, April 2022

Violent events, both global and familial, permeate a girl’s coming of age.

Description

In the night her whitened toes / cold sole on his calf / between his palms he warms / a slender foot – / twig bones, taut skin.

Jean Van Loon’s father was a metallurgist in an Ottawa lab that contributed to the Manhattan Project. The Geiger counter he brought home exposed her mother’s dinner plate as radioactive. Her childhood friend’s father sold cobalt bombs to the Soviet Union. Unbeknownst even to the family, her mother worked for Canada’s Cold War intelligence service.

Rooted in memory and history, Nuclear Family carries the reader into the sense of impending nuclear doom and the explosions of material wealth that shaped Van Loon’s childhood. Poems come alive with image, sound, and texture, portraying the innocence of childhood games, the worldwide effects of prolonged nuclear testing, and the long-lasting legacy of her father’s suicide – a fallout of radioactive silences.

In Nuclear Family violent events, both global and familial, permeate a girl’s coming of age in a story of cataclysm and, ultimately, recovery.

Reviews

“Relying on careful research and individual memory, Van Loon expertly weaves together the threads of household life with cultural moment… The seeming ease with which these poignant associations are made is jarring and disturbing but effective, forcing the reader to contemplate the everyday reproduction of atomic bombs and the subsequent lingering effects.” H-Net

“The memoir is heartbreaking, the history sobering and the poetry that encases both—making the music and emotion of Nuclear Family come to life—is crafted with exquisite care.” Arc Poetry Magazine

“Brave and carefully wrought, Nuclear Family is a rich, measured, language-spurred depiction of a Cold War childhood, thoughtfully summoning memorable detail within the precarity of historical tensions and family tragedy.” David O’Meara