Marmalade Parade
Marmalade Parade
By M. C. Joudrey
The first-person narrator has arrived at a house set high in the mountains in an undisclosed, remote location. He is confused, disoriented, and guarded. The home is owned by a man who is suffering from an illness affecting his memory. Both must navigate their combined gaps in memory to determine why they’ve been brought together.
There are various themes explored throughout these pages connected to some form of memory. Memory as construct that is both built, destroyed, and altered daily, its reliability fleeting. The physical objects that connect us to memory and how these are manifestations and representations filled with artificial meaning yet are often the only things left of us when we’re gone. Nostalgia as crutch and a curse, offering up memories that are self-serving rather than accurate. And how utterly terrifying it is when the memories themselves begin to vanish along with lucidity, as cognitive faculties fail us.
Details
Details
Guernica Editions (Essential Prose)
978-1-77849-043-9
200 pages |
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Reviews
Reviews
In cubist, feral prose, Joudrey explores mysteries of identity, life, and time, catastrophe and revelation.
Seyward Goodhand
A fascinating deep dive into the subconscious, connecting tiny threads that is greatly satisfying.
Zilla Jones, author of The World so Wide
Vivid imagery that will leave readers hearts racing.
Ben Berman Ghan, author of The Library Cosmic and The Years Shall Run Like Rabbits
Mesmerizes as it immerses readers in the strange and fractured coalescence of memory.
Hollay Ghadery
Joudrey’s writing is polished and finely tuned, with pared-down prose that gives the narrative clinical precision. The novel’s power lies in the questions it raises: about identity, memory, and what remains when everything has been forgotten. A clever, suspenseful take on memory and identity.
Publishers Weekly, BookLife
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Awards
Awards

About the author
M. C. JOUDREY is an award winning writer, artist, and designer. His novel Fanonymous (2019) won the Independent Publisher gold medal for best work of fiction for Western Canada. It was also nominated for two Manitoba Book Awards, including the Margaret Laurence Award for best work of fiction.