A Snake and a Feathered Birdby Angie EllisPublished by Thistledown PressReview by Brandon Fick$24.95 ISBN 9781771872812 Angie Ellis’s ambitious debut novel, A Snake and a Feathered Bird, began in such a way that I wasn’t sure I’d like it: the characters seemed guarded, the relationships and context opaque. After a series of events in the second chapter, I wondered where the story would go. What was it about? Really, I just needed patience. Ellis slowly peels back the layers of her characters, and the result is a deeply felt yet often restrained novel. While historical, it is relevant to our times. This is the story of Ben Maclean’s coming-of-age in late-nineteenth century Vancouver Island, mostly around 1890-1891, with flashbacks to the 1870s and 1880s following characters connected to Ben. At the beginning of the novel, Ben is living in a rural cabin with Agda and James, who he thinks are his parents. At nine, on a bootlegging run with James to a city that’s presumably Victoria, he meets Lily, who he’s told is his cousin, and misfortune strikes. Soon after returning to their cabin, Ben’s protective mother Agda mysteriously dies. Further summary cannot capture the complexity this novel offers –…
