The Sleeping Car Porter

Suzette Mayr
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The Sleeping Car Porter

Suzette Mayr
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Overview

CANADIAN224 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details

Overall rating: 3.711111 / 5 from 45 reviews.

AI Generated Review Summary

The Sleeping Car Porter, a historical novel by Suzette Mayr, has garnered attention for its vivid storytelling and significant cultural representation. The book explores the life of Baxter, a queer Black sleeping car porter in 1929, as he navigates a perilous journey and his secret love affair. While opinions on the book vary, many praise its imaginative and affecting narrative.

Summary topics

  • Narrative Quality: 17%
  • Cultural Representation: 27%

Review topics: ["book","story","porter","read","characters","baxter","writing","describes","scenery","tale","memories","concept","man"].

Review highlights

  • "A Heartfelt Canadian Story"Allison
  • "I knew I had to read this book as soon as I saw it and I thoroughly enjoyed it."Kathryn
  • "Excellent book. . . have passed it on to friends to read"Danielle

Reviews

I learned some things from this read

"3. 5 Stars I enjoyed this read because I had never heard of a sleeping car porter and that line of work, but it sounds like it would be an interesting job besides being scared of being fired constantly. I liked watching our main character Baxter and his want to be a dentist so bad, he was so close to having enough money and he was working so hard. I liked the snippets of queerness and also understanding that in that time period it would not be allowed. I also enjoyed that our story took place in Canada and only happened over a few short days. I would recommend this read to others"

JustineVandale (4/5)

Heard nothing but good things

"I bought this as a gift. I have not yet read it but put the caveat on it that I had to read it after my firend is done :) This book came highly recommended"

Sue W. (5/5)

Exciting addition to my shelf!

"Excited to have this one on my shelves, hopefully its good!"

Hannah J. (5/5)

Not the Life For the Idle.

"Quite the life working as a train employee, especially with many unhappy travelers in the sleeping car wanting attention. Loved the attention he gave the little girl."

M N. (3/5)

A story with a unique perspective

"Well written story written from a unique perspective. Characters were beautifully developed! Fully recommend"

Kelsey B. (5/5)

Boring With No Plot

"This story is about a black, gay porter working on a train that travels across Canada while he tries to save enough money to go to dentistry school. The book was a Giller prize winner in 2022 however I don’t feel like it deserved an award. There is no plot to this story as it is just about the porter doing his job on the train and the interactions with the people travelling on it. I found it very boring to read and had a hard time getting through it. #IndigoEmployee"

Janjoy (1/5)

Great informative read.

"Fascinating history of the prejudices and poor working conditions these men experienced."

Marianne B. (5/5)

A Heartfelt Canadian Story

"This story is so well narrated it must be a movie. The skilled sensitivity and precision used to develop the characters bring them alive and into my life. I particularly enjoyed the geographical plot points as """"the fastest train in the country"""" sped along its route. Baxter and his co-workers must be depictions of real people. Their actions, thoughts and language gently usher the reader into their world, and time - a time when race and class divisions seriously fractured Canadian society and individuals' psyches. As I read, I felt sad for the characters - all of them. Baxter's sexual escapades are tastefully described, showing those as the least of his challenges as he persues his personal goal. I think """"Baxter"""" himself would be proud of the way his character develops during the trip. Mayr is a genius. In my view, the accolades she was granted are highly deserved. I'll keep an eye out for the TV movie on Netflix. Very well done!!"

Allison (5/5)

Title matched the story of the book

"Text could have been slightly bigger. However, it was legible."

Dayna (4/5)

Always a Suzette Mayr fan! This novel is so well written from page to page!

"Interesting novel!"

Stacy (5/5)

Q&A

  • Published date: Aug 29, 2022
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 224
  • Publisher: Coach House Books
  • ISBN: 9781552454589
  • Dimensions: 5.25" W x 0.75" L x 8.25" H

"Sometimes, you come across a novel so perfect that you are confident that whomever you gift it to will love it." – Anton Hur, author of Toward Eternity: Roman

“Mayr’s prose is vivid but never overwrought, capturing the surrealism of intense fatigue in constant motion … Readers will be captivated.” – Publishers Weekly, starred review

“You can almost taste the exhaustion and despair in this quiet, yet vivid, story of a black man working as a porter on a sleeper train in Canada in 1929. Beautifully written, melancholy but never without hope.” – Ingunn Sneadel, 2024 Dublin Literary Award Judge

"Illuminating the ways in which race, class, and queerness intersect, this book will feel deeply relatable to anyone who has ever had to suffer the indignities of working front-line customer service." – Rose Sutherland, LitHub

"In 1929, being a passenger train porter was fraught with challenges...Baxter’s own sleep deprivation is perhaps the most intriguing character of the book. It leads to hallucinations, questionable decisions, and borderline supernatural suggestions."– Kirkus Reviews

"Suzette Mayr’s novel The Sleeping Car Porter an artfully constructed story that moves, beguiles, and satisfies." – Brett Josef Grubisic, The Toronto Star

"Suzette Mayr brings to life –believably, achingly, thrillingly –a whole world contained in a passenger train moving across the Canadian vastness, nearly one hundred years ago. As only occurs in the finest historical novels, every page in The Sleeping Car Porter feels alive and immediate –and eerily contemporary. The sleeping car porter in this sleek, stylish novel is named R.T. Baxter –called George by the people upon whom he waits, as is every other Black porter. Baxter’s dream of one day going to school to learn dentistry coexists with his secret life as a gay man, and in Mayr’s triumphant novel we follow him not only from Montreal to Calgary, but into and out of the lives of an indelibly etched cast of supporting characters, and, finally, into a beautifully rendered radiance." – 2022 Scotiabank Giller Prize Jury

"Mayr’s new novel, through painstaking historical research, reconstructs the workdays of a Black, lower-class, closeted gay man." – Reinhold Kramer, The Winnipeg Free Press

"Baxter works the trains as they run from Toronto to Winnipeg, through Calgary and Banff to Vancouver. Passengers on board wrestle with the details of their lives: hats and weddings, books and paperwork, drinks and cigars, childhood loss and bad telegrams, boots to be shined, a scrutinized pocket watch, communication with the dead. Baxter continuously serves them, ever watchful, needing perfection. Ten more demerits will get him fired, and a black man hiding his desire for other men has plenty of reasons to fear being targeted by whites with money. Endless patience is required to be a sleeping car porter. He's always exhausted, but it's a job, and he's saving, determined to pay for school and become a dentist who will one day be important. Then he'll be the one riding. For now, his dreams keep him alive, and time spent with people shoved together in tight spaces can shake up whole worlds. In the end, it's a little girl who fully reveals him. She’s just lost her mother and won't sleep, clinging to Baxter instead. This is intensely researched historical fiction that doesn’t feel like history. It feels like heart." – Tim McCarthy, Boswell Book Company, Milwaukee, WI

"Mayr evokes the mystique of transcontinental travel and the tumult of lives on the margins in this much-anticipated period novel. All aboard!" – Oprah Daily

“I couldn’t help imagining what a film Wes Anderson might make of Suzette Mayr’s The Sleeping Car Porter. The novel’s main character is a gay Black porter riding the rails in 1920’s Canada, coping with a horde of difficult long-haul passengers, including a child who appears to have permanently attached herself to his leg. Terrified that a breach of one of the railway’s insanely restrictive rules will get him fired before he can save enough money for dental school, he amuses himself—and keeps awake on his grueling shifts—by imagining the medical horrors that lie behind the smiles (or grimaces) of his clientele.” – The New York Times

". . . the intensely closeted, time-bending surrealism of a long-distance train journey with immersive, cinematic flair, not to mention the hallucinatory fantasies of an increasingly sleep-deprived Baxter who, as a character clinging to his dreams, is impossible not to get behind." – Claire Allfree, Daily Mail

"The Sleeping Car Porter calls to mind the fictive mining of queer and racialized Canadian history that novelists Ann-Marie MacDonald and Aren X. Tulchinsky…" – Evelyn C. White, Herisons

"Suzette Mayr’s The Sleeping Car Porter offers a richly detailed account of a particular occupation and time—train porter on a Canadian passenger train in 1929—and unforcedly allows it to illuminate the societal strictures imposed on black men at the time—and today. Baxter is a secretly-queer and sleep-deprived porter saving up for dental school, working a system that periodically assigns unexplained demerits, and once a certain threshold is reached, the porter loses his job. Thus, success is impossible, the best one can do is to fail slowly. As Baxter takes a cross-continental run, the boarding passengers have more secrets than an Agatha Christie cast, creating a powder keg on train tracks. The Sleeping Car Porter is an engaging and illuminating novel about the costs of work, service, and secrets." – Keith Mosman, Powell's Books


Suzette Mayr is the author of six novels including her most recent, The Sleeping Car Porter, winner of the 2022 Giller Prize, the Georges Bugnet Award for Fiction, and the City of Calgary W.O. Mitchell Book Prize. The novel was also shortlisted for the inaugural Carol Shields Prize for Fiction, and the Republic of Consciousness Prize (US and Canada). Mayr's other novels have won the ReLit Award and Cityof Calgary W.O. Mitchell Book Prize, and been nominated for the Commonwealth Prize for Best Book in the Canada-Caribbean Region, the Writers' Guild of Alberta's Best First Book and Best Novel Awards, and the Ferro- Grumley Award for LGBT Fiction. Mayr has done interdisciplinary work with Calgary theatre company Theatre Junction, and visual artists Lisa Brawn and Geoff Hunter. She has also published articles in journals such as Horror Studies, Studies in Canadian Literature,and The Journal of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature . She is a former President of the Writers' Guild of Alberta. Mayr teaches Creative Writing at the University of Calgary, and is a Killam Laureate.

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