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亚洲天堂 Lake resident releases book

I Heard the Turkki Call My Name written by Michael Riis-Christianson
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I Heard the Turkki Call My Name written by Michael Riis-Christianson. (Sashka Macievich photo/Lakes District 亚洲天堂)

Growing up in a broken home during the turbulent 1970s wasn鈥檛 easy, particularly if you were a city kid marooned in Northern British Columbia. One castaway survived his childhood shipwreck and is sharing his story in a new book.

I Heard the Turkki Call My Name is the second non-fiction work by 亚洲天堂 Lake author and museum curator Michael Riis-Christianson. Written under the pseudonym 鈥淢ike Turkki鈥 鈥 the name he used during his formative years 鈥 it鈥檚 a coming-of-age memoir about fishing trips, first drinks, family outings, and other near mishaps in the Lakes District.

Riis-Christianson began writing the book during his first bout with clinical depression almost four decades ago. Half of the book鈥檚 25 short stories were written over eight months in 1988; the remainder were completed during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The experience, he said, was cathartic.

鈥淚 started writing the book because I wanted to understand who I was and why I felt the way I did,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 also wanted to make myself laugh during a dark time. I succeeded in both respects, and committing these stories to paper gave me a new perspective on my childhood.鈥

Although most stories in I Heard the Turkki Call My Name are humorous, some are poignant and explore issues all adolescents face. They range from 鈥淩eal Dad,鈥 a story about an unscheduled visit by the author鈥檚 biological father in the early 1970s, to 鈥淲here the Rubber Meets the Road,鈥 which chronicles a young adult鈥檚 misadventures behind the wheel of a car that started life as a police cruiser.

I Heard the Turkki Call My Name is filled with references to 鈥70s pop culture that Canadians who grew up in that era will instantly recognize. Its quirky title is a tongue-in-cheek allusion to Canadian author Margaret Craven鈥檚 best-selling 1967 novel I Heard the Owl Call My Name, which was required reading for many BC students in the 1970s.

鈥淎lthough these are stories from my childhood, I think they will resonate with anyone who grew up in rural BC during the latter half of the twentieth century,鈥 Riis-Christianson says. 鈥淎dolescence is difficult and at times painful, but most of us survive it and go on to become reasonably well-adjusted, productive adults. Yet I know from experience that what we go through as teenagers can profoundly impact us later in life.鈥

If early reader response is an indication, Riis-Christianson achieved his goals. An editor who read the manuscript last fall described it as 鈥渟imply beautiful鈥 and 鈥渦proariously funny,鈥 adding that 鈥淚 know I鈥檝e read something good when it stays with me.鈥

Riis-Christianson is an award-winning journalist whose work has appeared in the Vancouver Sun, Lakes District 亚洲天堂, Gulf Islands Driftwood, and several other publications. His first book, History Matters, was published in 2022 and is currently in its second printing.

I Heard the Turkki Call My Name is available online, in local bookstores, and at the Lakes District Museum in 亚洲天堂 Lake.



About the Author: Black Press Media Staff

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