A Lake Superior Apocalypse Novel Review

Leif Enger and musician at Enger’s launch for “I Cheerfully Refuse,” a novel set on Lake Superior.

Duluth author Leif Enger’s latest novel, “I Cheerfully Refuse,” is set in the near future in small towns along Lake Superior and on the wide water itself. The apocalypse that’s occurred isn’t some cataclysmic event, rather the novel investigates what could happen if current conditions exaggerate. Citizens are increasingly desperate and illiterate, a billionaire ruling class referred to as “astronauts” (think Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos) employ indentured servants and conduct “compliance” experiments on people in medical ships that roam the seas. Lake Superior is subject to rogue storms and increasing temperatures. The warming waters finally give up the bodies that have lain preserved in icy slumber in its depths. School children have so many behavior problems from toxic chemicals they’d been exposed to in utero, they’re rated on a Feral Comportment Continuum.

Rainy, the narrator, is a bereaved bear of a man and a musician from the small mythical town of Icebridge on Minnesota’s North Shore. (If you read Enger’s previous novel, “Virgil Wander,” Icebridge is right next to Greenstone, the mythical town where that book is set.)

Image courtesy of Amazon

Through a series of unfortunate events, Rainy ends up fleeing Icebridge on a sailboat named “Flower.” Most of the novel follows his Gulliver-like travels to the Slate Islands and Michigan’s Upper Peninsula where he encounters fog, hunger, storms, and lawless townspeople. But there’s also poetic beauty in gulls that settle on his sailboat when he plays his bass, magisterial island rocks, and unexpected kindnesses from strangers. I don’t want to give away too much more of the plot.

Things I loved: The novel’s focus on the importance of music, books and literacy. The sailboat setting, and Enger obviously knows his nautical terms, having had a boat himself in Bayfield, Wisconsin. I also appreciated the hopefulness amidst the horror.

Things I didn’t like so much: The book’s ending. Although it’s beautiful and literary, I expected more after the epic events that led up to it. Once Rainy reaches his ultimate destination, readers are only given a few vague lines about Rainy feeling a slight warm weight against his back, “a pressure like a palm between my shoulder blades.” A few dream-like images round it out and that’s it. But I still think I’ll give it a 5 on Goodreads because the writing is so gorgeous, and we Duluthians need to support each other. The world out there is already cruel enough.

I attended Enger’s Duluth launch last April and noted a contrast to his “Virgil Wander” launch six years earlier. That event was held at a local independent bookstore shortly after Enger had moved here. About 45 people attended and ate brownies and bars made by Enger’s wife, Robin.

His latest launch was held at a local brewery where people’s food order buzzers interrupted Enger’s presentation as their pizzas arrived. I’d say the audience tripled, which is a testament to the connections Enger has developed in the community during his time here. True to the musical emphasis in “I Cheerfully Refuse,” a guitarist accompanied Enger, playing through breaks in his reading.

Enger said he wasn’t sure if he could call himself an actual Duluthian yet or not. As he lies in bed at night, he still thrills at the sound of the lift bridge and ore boats in the canal communicating with each other with their horns. He thinks if he were a real Duluthian, that would all be passé.

I would answer: the trick is holding onto that wonder even after hearing the horns a thousand times. Then Enger will be a real Duluthian.

How Hallmark’s “Rescuing Christmas” Movie Made my Tree Ornament Famous

The main characters in “Rescuing Christmas.” Image courtesy of Hallmark.

Russ and I watched “Rescuing Christmas,” a Hallmark movie this weekend that is set in my home of Duluth, Minnesota. The movie is available on the Hallmark Movie Now Channel. If you have an Amazon Prime membership, you can get a week-long free trial membership, which we opted for to view this movie.

I know, I’m so cheap!

Hallmark shot another Christmas movie in my fair town last year. It was called “Merry Kiss Cam” and dealt with a Christmas romance between a bar owner and an artistic painter. I don’t recall that “Merry Kiss Cam” ever specifically mentioned the setting was Duluth, but that was refreshingly clear in “Rescuing Christmas.” This was one reason I liked it better.

I also liked it better because it didn’t try to make Duluth look like something it’s not. There were plenty of local landmarks included in the shots, from OMC Smokehouse (a restaurant whose name stands for oink, moo, cluck – very meat-centric, but vegetarians can find something to eat there, too), and other Lincoln Park businesses including the Dovetail Café and Frost River, which is an outdoor clothing and equipment store. Those familiar with Duluth will also recognize the Aerial Lift Bridge, Bayfront Festival Park, the train Depot, and one of the red brick mansions that are frequent sights in the eastern part of town.

The movie follows several days in the life of Erin, a talented photographer whose Christmas spirit has been ruined by a past breakup. She’s granted three Christmas wishes, her final wish being that Christmas would just disappear. To her bewilderment, it does! Can Sam, her potential (and rather generic-looking) suitor who is a wood-carving lawyer, help her bring back Christmas to the world?

Other things I liked about the movie are that it wasn’t too smarmy and that it attempted a bit of diversity. Get this, there was a Black Santa. Plus, a Black Santa overlord, who had Star Trek tendencies. She was rather like a combination of Captain Kirk and Lieutenant Uhura. Good for Hallmark to at least try for some diversity.

My now-famous Christmas tree ornament.

Yet another thing I liked about this movie is that an ornament similar to one we happen to have on our own Christmas tree plays a pivotal role! The ornament is a birch tree slice that features a painting by Kate Kebbekus, a local artist. It depicts a grove of white birch trees with a red heart etched into one of them. (What the movie doesn’t show you is that there’s another painting on the back that features a red Christmas ornament.)

I bought the ornament at a local Christmas fair a couple of years ago. I could not believe it when a similar ornament showed up in the movie! Sam gives the ornament as a present to Erin when they celebrate their first Christmas together. Sam said that the ornament was one his family used to hang, and it was his favorite. Erin reacts favorably, giving him a big smooch in front of all their relatives and friends.

It’s a Hallmark movie, so, of course, everything ends happily for all.

If you’re a “Marie’s Meanderings” devotee, you may remember that I created my own Hallmark Movie Drinking Game during the pandemic. The rules involve imbibing varying amounts of alcohol depending on what formulaic scenes occur in the movie.

In the case of “Rescuing Christmas,” there are not as many formulaic scenes as usual, but there are a few. The Christmas kiss between the main characters is the biggest one. According to my game, that is on the highest level and involves a whole shot of liquor.

Lessor imbibing results from the scenes where “a cynic is filled with the Christmas spirit” and “a Christmas-themed food is mentioned.” In this movie, the food are pizzelles, or Italian cookies. In my game, these require finishing your drink.

One sip is required whenever the town mayor appears, hot chocolate is on screen (lots of those scenes are in this movie, usually with a peppermint stick), mistletoe makes an appearance, and a character makes a deal with Santa or one of his minions.

Russ and I did not play the drinking game during this movie, but if you do, there’s probably enough for a proper buzz.

Even if you don’t play the drinking game, the movie could help you get into the Christmas spirit. We watched it after a day of decorating amidst a gentle snowfall that provided the required ambiance but did not amount to enough to shovel. Now that’s something everyone can get behind.

Happy Holidays, everyone!