December 15, 1999
Paul Tough, Editor
Saturday Night
184 Front St. East
Ste 400
Toronto, Ontario
M5A 4N3
Dear Mr. Tough,
We would like to point out a rather annoying omission
in Jane Farrow's piece entitled Diary Rock in your 'Millennium
Issue'. In her list of female writers who "transformed Canadian
literature," Farrow fails to mention Emily Chesley - a speculative
fiction writer who published a formidable body of work at the turn of
the last century while residing in London, Ontario.
Like Susanna Moodie, Catharine Parr Traill and Pauline
Johnson, the unheralded Emily Chesley also "tended towards introspection,"
had a "propensity for journal writing," and certainly felt
the sting of being "chronically rejected by snooty Upper Canadian
publishers." And, like her peers, Chesley's creativity was fueled,
at least in part, by her harsh experiences of "survival on the
Canadian frontier" and the cruelties inflicted by "inattentive
lovers and traitorous white men" (in Chesley's case, hirsute cavalry
men of Norwegian descent).
It is our view - nay, our duty to illuminate the fact
- that Chesley's contribution to science fiction and the feminist movement
in Canada has been too long overlooked by literary historians and the
media. More can be learned about Chesley's remarkable life and works
at http://emilychesley.com
Sincerely,
Mac Ruddock
For the Emily Chesley Reading Circle