HomeAuthor BioFictionShort Works


Category: Fiction
Publisher: Canada:Knopf 2013
Format: Hardcover, 448 pgs.
On Sale Date: September 17, 2013

Made The 150 Great Canadian Books list.

Shortlisted for the 2014 Stephen Leacock Prize.

Nominated for the 2013 Giller Prize.

See Wayne’s comments in Haslitt on Joyce’s Ulysses and The Son of a Certain Woman.

Read reviews in Maclean's, Chronicle Herald, Winnepeg Free Press, Toronto Star and Globe and Mail.

See book “trailer” here.

Excerpt published in The Globe and Mail.


See this feature in The Scotsman Newspaper by David Robinson.

Book Description
The Son Of A Certain Woman

Percy Joyce, born in St. John’s, Newfoundland, in the fifties is an outsider from childhood, set apart by a congenital disfigurement. Taunted and bullied, he is also isolated by his intelligence and wit, and his unique circumstances: an unbaptized boy raised by a single mother in a fiercely Catholic society. Soon on the cusp of teenagehood, Percy is filled with yearning, wild with hormones, and longing for what he can’t have—wanting to be let in . . . and let out. At the top of his wish list is his disturbingly alluring mother, Penelope, whose sex appeal fairly leaps off the page. Everyone in St. John’s lusts after her—including her sister-in-law, Medina; their paying boarder, the local chemistry teacher, Pops MacDougal; and . . . Percy.

Percy, Penelope, and Pops live in the Mount, home of the city’s Catholic schools and most of its clerics, none of whom are overly fond of the scandalous Joyces despite the seemingly benign protection of the Archbishop of Newfoundland himself, whose chief goal is to bring “little Percy Joyce” into the bosom of the Church by whatever means necessary. In pursuit of that goal, Brother McHugh, head of Percy’s school, sets out to uncover the truth behind what he senses to be the complicated relationships of the Joyce household. And indeed there are dark secrets to be kept hidden: Pops is in love with Penelope, but Penelope and Medina are also in love—an illegal relationship: if caught, they will be sent to the Mental, and Percy, already an outcast of society, will be left without a family.

The Son of a Certain Woman brilliantly mixes sorrow and laughter as it builds toward an unforgettable ending. Will Pops marry Penelope? Will Penelope and Medina be found out? Will Percy be lured into the Church? It is a reminder of the pain of being an outsider; of the sustaining power of love and the destructive power of hate; and of the human will to triumph.

HOME | AUTHOR BIO | FICTION | NONFICTION | SHORT WORKS | CONTACT INFO
Copyright 2006 Wayne Johnston