Review of Ruth Latta’s Grace and the Secret Vault
By Stephen Dale
To
mark International Women’s Day in 2017, a group called Equal Voice organized an
event in which young women from across the country occupied all 338 seats in
the House of Commons. The women spoke powerfully of the issues that are
important to them and, in the process, made a strong symbolic statement about
how politics might be different if more women were involved. With only a
quarter of the seats in Parliament currently occupied by women, it’s clear that
the seat of Canadian democracy remains, overwhelmingly, a boys’ club.
That
the number of female Parliamentarians has increased to some extent recently is
a testament to the strength of a few trailblazing women determined to defy the
odds and take their place on the national political stage. One of those pioneers
was Grace Woodsworth MacInnis, who served as the NDP Member of Parliament for
Vancouver Kingsway between 1966 and 1974.
Ottawa novelist Ruth Latta
recalls that, as a student at Queen’s University in the early 1970s, she was
fascinated with this diminutive yet dynamic women, one of the first Canadian
Parliamentarians to regularly raise issues of concern to women on the floor of
the Commons. Latta’s latest young adult novel, Grace and the Secret Vault, (Ottawa, Baico Publishing Inc. 2017 www.baico.ca ISBN: 978-1-77216-092-5) is a fictional
account of an especially formative period in Grace’s life.
Although
the book doesn’t deal directly with Grace’s work as a politician, in a subtle
way it sheds light on how the future MP developed the determined outlook and
fortitude of character that would be necessary to storm the bastions of male
power.
The novel
recreates a particularly turbulent year in Grace’s early life. Her father, J.S.
Woodsworth (who would go on to lead the CCF, the forerunner of the NDP) had
lost his job as a minister in an idyllic British Columbia coastal town because
of his opposition to the First World War. In 1919, with the war over, Grace’s
father remains unafraid of courting controversy. He travels the country
speaking out for social justice, and takes a role in organizing the landmark
Winnipeg General Strike.
Against the
backdrop of these historic events, Grace gets an up-close lesson in courage. Her
father stands tall in the face of condemnation, economic sanction, and even the
threat of violence. Perhaps more importantly, Grace’s mother summons a special
kind of strength: keeping the family afloat by working as a teacher, overseeing
a chaotic household of high-spirited children, setting a tone of optimism and
good humour.
Latta tells this
story in a fluid, fast-paced and conversational way, seamlessly weaving
together the daily details of life in the British Columbia of a century ago
with the book’s overarching political narrative. The characters’ dialogue is
conveyed convincingly in the lexicon of the day, but the emotional pull of the
story is timeless. And despite its subject matter, the author avoids propagandizing.
There’s also a sly twist on the idea of the “mystery” that adds some fun at the
end.
Grace and the Secret Vault
is a lively read and a historical tale with a clear resonance for the contemporary
reader, especially for the young person who might want to grow up to change the
world.
Ottawa writer Stephen Dale’s latest book is Noble
Illusions: Young Canada Goes to War (Fernwood Books).
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