In Join the Revolution, Comrade, Charles Foran brings to the essay
form the same restlessness and originality that mark his novels and
non-fiction. Foran visits places in Vietnam that have been 'colonized'
by western war films, talks to Shanghai residents about their colossal
city and commiserates with the people of Bali about the effects of
terrorist bombs on their island. In Beijing he looks up old friends he
had known back in 1989 during the days before and after the June 4th
massacre. Join the revolution, Comrade, a friend had loved to say,
quoting a line from a Bertolucci film. Foran also 'encounters' Miguel de
Cervantes, the Buddha of Compassion, and the pumped-up American Tom
Wolfe. He maps the geography of Canadian literature and pinpoints the
'inner-Newfoundland' of Wayne Johnston. He defends the novel against
those who would tame it and uses an ancient Chinese philosopher to
explain how one imagination -- his own-- works. Whether exploring the
waterways of Thailand or the streets of his childhood in suburban
Toronto, meditating on raising children in post-9/11 Asia or the music
of good prose, Charles Foran's writing is fresh, alert, and free of
convention.