Antanas Sileika on the Murderous Children’s Poet Who Inspired His Captivating New Historical Novel
January 19, 2023
Antanas Sileika is one of the quiet stars of CanLit, creating memorable, complex, and enthralling stories in his five novels and his memoir. The erstwhile director of the Humber School for Writers (prior to his 2017 retirement from the College), Sileika returns in fine form this season with Some Unfinished Business (Cormorant Books).
Following protagonist Martin Averka from his childhood in the tiny Lithuanian village of Lyn Lake, Some Unfinished Business is a story of idealism, coming of age, and the loss of innocence, set against a backdrop of brutal Soviet occupation. Inspired by a charismatic teacher as a young teen, Martin alters the course of his life as he enters the resistance movement – a bitter irony when the teacher is revealed as a Soviet spy.
Years later, crushed by the tyranny he tried to withstand, and against his beloved wife’s wishes, Martin confronts the man who broke his heart Martin’s epic life story and, in particular the electrifying reunion with his one-time mentor, is evidence of a writer with deep insight into the human condition. Sileika showcases his knack for building worlds that feel spellbindingly intimate while encompassing sweeping historical storytelling, much of it pulled from meticulous intimate while encompassing sweeping historical storytelling, much of it pulled from meticulous research. In one of the most dizzying examples of Sileika finding fascinating historical details for his fiction, the teacher is inspired by Kostas Kubilinskas, a stranger-than-fiction figure who was a nationally beloved children’s poet and Soviet spy in Lithuania, and who is blamed for over a dozen Lithuania freedom fighters’ deaths.
In our discussion of Some Unfinished Business today, Antanas tells us about a mysterious series of unsolicited letters that sparked the idea for the novel, how his Lithuanian heritage connected him to the story he was telling, and about his extensive research process, which even included being in the bedroom where the poet-spy slept during his life.
Open Book: Do you remember how your first started this novel or the very first bit of writing you did for it?
Antanas Sileika: A murderous Soviet-era poet as a subject of my novel! How could I resist? But I didn’t dream up the idea – it came from an unexpected source. l began to receive what turned out to be a series of letters from a stranger in Lithuania. He told me true stories about his parents’ village life under postwar Soviet repression. He described the town schoolteacher who went on to become Lithuania’s premier children’s poet, but only after he had infiltrated the anti-Soviet resistance and shot a partisan in the head as he slept. A rhyming assassin! How could I not write a novel about this?
OB: How did you choose the setting of your novel? What connection, if any, did you have to the setting when you began writing?
AS: I have Lithuanian heritage but I was born and raised in Canada. Because I have the language, I have a window into the place where many dramatic things happened during and after the second world war. I am fascinated by the beautiful baroque city of Vilnius, as well as the dark and mysterious Lithuanian forests that are like something out of fairy tales in The Brothers Grimm. Many intense actions took place in these locations.
OB: Did the ending of your novel change at all through your drafts? If so, how?
AS: I started out to write a tragedy, but my characters resisted! They demanded a happy ending, and I felt obligated to let them have one. But they were all in desperate straits and I needed to dream up a way out for them, an avenue of escape from a tyrannical regime.
OB: If you had to describe your book in one sentence, what would you say?
AS: It’s the story of the struggle for everyday happiness in the face of the cruel meat grinder of European history.
OB: Did you to any specific research for this novel? Tell us a bit about that process?
AS: Did I ever! I drove into the mouldering wooden village deep in the forest to speak to old people who remembered the town’s vicious poet and I sat in the room where he slept. I combed through used bookstores in Vilnius to find descriptions life in the fifties there. I sat in KGB archives with a Russian speaker to help me read the reports by the treacherous poet and his suggestions about how to attack partisan bunkers. I walked the Lithuania Writers’ Union hall where the poet was honoured and where there was a bar in the basement that he visited to help drink himself to death, perhaps in remorse.
OB: Who did you dedicate your novel to, and why?
AS: I dedicated the book to the residents of Lyn Lake, the remote village where poor farmers and villagers had to withstand violence from German soldiers, Soviet officials, and even the partisans who were fighting to free the country. These were honest people, good people just trying to live decent lives while the world was in flames around them.