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Winter 2007 (The Write Stuff)
When Golda Fried, BA’94, left the composition class she teaches at a community college
in Greensboro, North Carolina, one October day in 2005, she realized that her cell phone
was clogged with messages. Her initial panic – “I thought someone had died” – gave way to
joy when she found out that her book, Nellcott is My Darling, had been nominated for a Governor General’s Literary Award.
“I really didn’t think they gave them to books from small presses,” she laughs. “I was
in total shock. Even my publisher was surprised.”
Given all the critical kudos garnered by Nellcott, the nomination shouldn’t have
come as such a jolt. The Montreal Mirror described the book as “one of those rare novels that
captures innocence without resorting to nostalgia,” while the Globe and Mail hailed it
as a “sensitive, sensual, funny and accurate map of the rocky and mystifying territory between childhood and maturity.”
It’s hard to imagine Nellcott being written by anyone but a McGill graduate, steeped as the book
is in the day-to-day experiences of a McGill student in the ’90s. Fried’s novel tells the tale of Alice Charles,
a naive and quirky young woman who leaves the warm and insular confines of her family home in Toronto to
attend McGill. Living in residence, the neurotic newcomer is surrounded by a menagerie of fellow
undergrads, all in various stages of self-absorption. Alice’s Wonderland is turned upside down when
she falls for Nellcott Ragland, the proverbial boy-from-the-wrong-side-of-the-tracks, who wears black
eyeliner and works in a record store.
The 34-year-old Fried admits that reading a pair of coming-of-age novels (Leonard Cohen’s The Favourite Game
and Daniel Richler’s Kicking Tomorrow) inspired her to try her own hand at the genre. Adhering to the
adage “write what you know,” Fried shares a lot in common with her protagonist – although the author admits
that she condensed several years of her own experience into Alice’s inaugural one. For starters, both are
Torontonians whose fathers are proud, chest-thumping McGill alumni. And, like Alice, Fried arrived at
McGill as a wide-eyed freshman, just 17 years old.
Fried is particularly adept at capturing the sights and sounds of residence life and the massive internal
upheaval that many students experience when they move away from home for the first time. “Initially, I was
really intimidated,” she says. “I didn’t have a lot of friends coming in.”
Like her creator, Alice tries to meet people by becoming the secretary of the ill-fated Film Society, where
members spend as much time arguing about which film to show (“You guys had to pick the most obscure Rolling
Stones movie, didn’t you?”) to the merits of serving Pop Tarts instead of popcorn.
And while shout outs to the Leacock Building and the Bifteck bar will be welcomed by alumni
like old friends, the appeal of this girl-grows-up story is broader than that. “I think that
anyone who’s left home for their first year of school can relate to the book.”
Currently, Fried is collaborating with illustrator Vesna Mostovac on a graphic novella. She admits that carving
out opportunities to write can be challenging. “Unfortunately, I’m not very disciplined,” she laments. “I don’t
think I do a good job of balancing work and writing. It would be easier if I was an insomniac, but I sleep a lot.”
By Neale McDevitt and Daniel McCabe
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Website © Golda Fried. / All rights reserved.
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