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Barometer Rising (New Canadian Library)

Hugh Maclennan

Barometer Rising (New Canadian Library) Hugh Maclennan Amazon Price: $9.31
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 9 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

Brilliantly Conceived, Flawlessly Executed 5 out of 5 stars.
8 of 8 people found this review helpful.

Another entry from the Canadian New Library Series, another homerun for Canadian literature. That must necessarily be the ruling on this immensely engaging 1941 freshman effort from Hugh MacLennan, for "Barometer Rising" is a taut, intensely character driven novel from one of Canada's great essayists. MacLennan went on to write several other novels, more essays, and even some travelogues, history, and poetry. He is nothing if not versatile. If only more people knew about the wealth of literary gems from the Great White North awaiting their pleasure in the libraries and bookstores. For those interested in exploring the brilliance of Canadian literature, Hugh MacLennan is a great place to start. Hugh MacLennan died in 1990.

"Barometer Rising" takes place in Halifax, Nova Scotia during 1917. The war in Europe continues to grind away, chewing up young men from around the world in its trenches and no man's lands. Nearly every passing day sees troopships exiting Halifax harbor bound for the bloodbath, and nearly every day they pass supply and munitions ships entering the port on their way to and from Europe. The city is full of foreign sailors and soldiers from every point of the compass. The war is a big deal, and since Canada serves as Britain's whipping boy, Halifax provides a safe harbor beyond the reach of German U-boats. But disaster lurks in the waters off Halifax: a munitions ship loaded with 500,000 pounds of trinitrotoluol sails into the harbor and collides with another ship. The resulting explosion is nearly nuclear in its destructiveness. Thousands die as major sections of the city explode and burn. The author shrewdly sets up his novel in countdown form, beginning on the Sunday before the explosion and ending the tale the following Monday, a few days after the disaster. MacLennan makes this Nova Scotian city the major character in his book, showing the reader the wartime changes while allowing us to take an occasional glimpse behind the curtain to see the way the city was before the war.

A cast of characters parades through the streets of Halifax for our perusal. The Wain family is central to the story. There is Penelope "Penny" Wain, a brilliant woman who designs boats for the war effort while withstanding the barbs from jealous male co-workers. Her father, Colonel Wain, is an old pro-English patriarch who cannot stand the fact that he remains in Halifax while the war rages in Europe. He wishes to return to battle and seek some glory, but his first tour of duty ended in disaster. For this disgrace, Wain blames his nephew Neil Macrae. Now Neil roams the streets of Halifax, seeking redemption for a tragedy on the fields of Europe. The reemergence of Neil places Major Angus Murray in a moral quandary; he realizes the return of Wain's nephew will upset his plans for the future. The reader must decide for themselves if the choices the characters make are the correct ones.

An afterword (the Canadians are polite; they do not put spoilers at the beginning of the book as we do in the United States) written by Alistair MacLeod provides some personal anecdotes about the explosion, followed by a critique of the story. To MacLeod, the story deftly reveals the big town/small town differences between some of the characters, between those born and raised in Halifax versus those who hail from Cape Breton. For me, the most interesting theme of the book was MacLennan's political views about Canada and its relationship to the United States and England. To the author, Canada will emerge from the war as the keystone of the world, a bridge between barbaric Europe lost in its destructive wars and the emerging power of the United States. He deplores the second-class status of Canada, its relegation as second fiddle to the United Kingdom. Several times throughout the story, the characters step back from their activities and wax philosophic about the position of Canada and Nova Scotia in relation to the rest of the world. To call MacLennan a Canadian nationalist would not be too extreme of a statement.

I did not know what to expect from this book when I opened its covers. I do like Canadian literature, so that is never a problem. "Barometer Rising" is only 219 pages long, so it is necessary that the author grabs you fast and makes you care about his creation. He succeeds in spades because he brings his characters to life through carefully crafted scenes of introspection, clinical descriptions of the city, and the dramatic countdown to the explosion. The reader cares about what happens to these people, and hopes that the author will bring everything to a tidy resolution in the end. For a quick read that is hugely entertaining and leaves you hungry for more, seek out this book.

Editorial Review:

Penelope Wain believes that her lover, Neil Macrae, has been killed while serving overseas under her father. That he died apparently in disgrace does not alter her love for him, even though her father is insistent on his guilt. What neither Penelope or her father knows is that Neil is not dead, but has returned to Halifax to clear his name.

Hugh MacLennan’s first novel is a compelling romance set against the horrors of wartime and the catastrophic Halifax Explosion of December 6, 1917.

The Watch That Ends the Night

Hugh MacLennan

The Watch That Ends the Night Hugh MacLennan List Price: $19.95
By: McGill-Queen's University Press
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Montreal in the Thirties 4 out of 5 stars.
3 of 5 people found this review helpful.

This is a very interesting book on two main counts, it describes the political climate amongst the intelligentsia in ther 1930's and it also offers a glimpse of what Montreal was like during the great depression.
Hugh Mclennon was a Montreal author, originally from Nova Scotia whoe was also a distinguished classics teacher teaching in Mcgill University.
The story is basically the relationship between Jerome Martell, a Monreal surgeon and his alter ego. George. Both are in love with the same women Catherine. Catherine is George's childhood friend who eventually marries Jerome then a successful surgeon. Jerome is someone from a modest background who had fought in WW1 and was notably damaged by his experience. He is a somewhat heroic charecter loosely based on Dr. Norman Bethune. At first he is happy with Catherine who is barely clinging to life with a damaged heart. However when Jerome becomes politically active, the relationship deteriorates and he abandons Catherine and their daughter Sally and goes off to fight on the Republican side in thr Spanish Civil War. He eventually disappears and is presumed dead. Catherine then turns to her old friend George and they marry. Jerome reappears twelve years later at the height of the Korean War and Catherine nearly dies of shock when she meets her ex husband.
The stregnth of the book is the descrition of St.Catherine Street, the main Montreal thoroughfare during the thirties with its unemployed crowds shuffling aimlessly. It is also good in the social ferment, in particular between the commuunist and the right wing French Canadians. Mclennon tries to use Jerome as a political everyman showing how devotion to a cause though well intentioned leads only to misery all around. He does this very well. In style the book sometimes reminds me of a Canadian Hemingway with occasional touches of A.J. Cronin. The weakness of the book is the sometimes unconvincing dialogue and the sketchy portraits of the female charecters. In summary this is a very informed and entertaining novel.

Editorial Review:

George and Catherine Stewart share the worry of Catherine's illness, which could cause her death at any time, and the memory of Jerome Martell, Catherine's first husband and George's closest friend. Martel, a brilliant doctor passionately concerned with social justice, is presumed to have died in a Nazi prison camp. His sudden return to Montreal precipitates the central crisis of this novel. Hugh MacLennan takes the reader into the lives of his three characters and back into the world of Montreal in the thirties, when politics could send an idealist across the world to Spain, France, Auschwitz, Russian, China, and back, finally, to his old home.

Two Solitudes Large Print Edition (Large Print Library)

Maclennan

Two Solitudes Large Print Edition (Large Print Library) Maclennan Amazon Price: $17.90
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By: Fitzhenry and Whiteside
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 6 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

Stuck with each other, for better or worse 4 out of 5 stars.
17 of 17 people found this review helpful.

Although it has been several years since I have read "Two Solitudes," the book remains quite vivid for me -- perhaps, in no small part, because I live only a few miles from the Quebec border, and listen quite attentively to Canadian news on the radio. Everything, and yet nothing has changed regarding Anglo-French relations over the sixty years that have passed since the conclusion of the action in the book. Of course, English shop clerks in Montreal no longer tell Francophone patrons to "speak white;" the Roman Catholic Church has lost virtually all of its influence over French Canadians; the notion of the French being "maitres chez nous" -- masters in our own house -- has triumphed to such an extent that the province came within a hair's breadth of voting for independence several years ago. Yet despite the all but de facto political autonomy of Quebec -- and in no small part because of it -- all of the old misunderstanding and mistrust so skillfully depicted in MacLennan's book persist. Two profoundly different cultures, heirs to profoundly different colonial pasts, still vie for the soul of the second largest nation on earth. For this reason alone, Americans (famously and shamefully ignorant of Canadian history) ought to read "Two Solitudes;" for Canadians, or course, it should be required reading. But "Two Solitudes" is not merely a sociopolitical tract. I found the love story quite engaging, with neither of the characters presented as a mere representation of ethnicity and class, and the resolution ennobling in a way one doesn't expect from a novel any more. The term "old-fashioned" comes to mind, but I'm afraid that will be terribly off-putting for many modern readers. Let's call the book solid, sure, and rewarding, then -- and evocative and informative as well. That's a lot to put into a package this tidily crafted, but MacLennan has done it well. Exclusive of the work of Robertson Davies, in a class by itself, "Two Solitudes" bids fair to be called the Great Canadian Novel.

Editorial Review:

Two Solitudes Large Print Edition is published by Fitzhenry and Whiteside.

Return of the Sphinx

Hugh MacLennan

Return of the Sphinx Hugh MacLennan Amazon Price: $9.95
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By: McGill-Queen's University Press

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Editorial Review:

Alan Ainslie is an able and dedicated man high in the government. Daniel Ainslie, his son, is a member of an explosive movement impelled by the naive rebelliousness of the New left. Hugh MacLennan weaves a complex and succinct story of two generations in conflict.

Hugh MacLennan's Best - A Selection of the Famous Author's Best Work - Published and Unpublished - Including Poetry, Essays, Journalism, Travel Writing, and Excerpts from All of His Novels

Hugh MacLennan

Hugh MacLennan's Best - A Selection of the Famous Author's Best Work - Published and Unpublished - Including Poetry, Essays, Journalism, Travel Writing, and Excerpts from All of His Novels Hugh MacLennan By: McClelland & Stewart/Douglas Gibson
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Hugh MacLennan's Best - A Selection of the Famous Author's Best Work - Published and Unpublished - Including Poetry, Essays, Journalism, Travel Writing, and Excerpts from All of His Novels

Hugh MacLennan

Hugh MacLennan's Best - A Selection of the Famous Author's Best Work - Published and Unpublished - Including Poetry, Essays, Journalism, Travel Writing, and Excerpts from All of His Novels Hugh MacLennan By: McClelland & Stewart/Douglas Gibson
Amazon Marketplace: 9 new & used starting at $0.44

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Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Authors, A-Z -> ( M ) -> MacLennan, Hugh
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> World Literature -> British -> General AAS
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Contemporary


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