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Books
nominated for the 2000 Award
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Click here for the complete A-Z listing of nominated titles. |
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Book Information |
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Broken
Ground by
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ISBN: 0771041845 (CAN) |
Find out more about this author on these sites: |
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Broken
Ground
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books by this author:
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Admirers of Jack Hodgins' previous
work will be astonished by this break-through book. Complementing his
usual high good humour, much of this powerful new novel is dark tragedy.
Although it is set in 1922, the slaughter of the First World War lurks
behind everything here, long before vivid flashbacks take us into the
horror of the tranches. The book's central setting is a "soldiers settlement"
on Vancouver Island, where returned soldiers received land from a grateful
nation. This meant that the men and their families ended up in tents staring
at a landscape dominated by giant tree stumps, each of which had to be
blasted out at graet risk to life and limb. Significantly,as they cleared
their fields yard by yard, none of the men would allow barbed wire fences
around them. The story of the settlement at Portuguese Creek is told in
the voices of half a dozen of the inhabitants. among them we meet young
Charlie MacIntosh, eleven, trying to recover from the sudden loss of his
father; Johanna Seyerstead, the school teacher still waiting defiantly
for her missing-in-action husband to ride into town; Wyatt Taylor, the
Ontario man who crosses the country on horseback on a hopeless quest,
only to be drawn into a romantic triangle that both amuses and fascinates
his new neighbours. And above all there is Matt Pearson, the former teacher
haunted by seeing one of his men - a keen young former student, a lover
of poetry - shot in France as a deserter. Just as the war is a dark, brooding
presence, so too is the forest fire up in the hills above the little community's
wooden homes, in a world of more than churning smoke. "There was heat
and noise too, and wind, and flying sparks, and heavy burning limbs that
tumbled through the air." In Jack Hodgin's skilful hands the horror of
the forest fire intensifies the remembered horror of the First World War.
The result is an extraordinarily powerful book, enriched by the author's
humanity, which leaves us feeling like a member of a dozen households,
and part of an entire community.
Jack Hodgins was born in 1938 in the Comox Valley, on Vancouver Island. After attending the University of British Columbia he taught high school English in Nanaimo, before teaching at a number of Canadian Universities. He now teaches Creative Writing at the University of Victoria. His first book, a collection of stories entitled Spit Delaney's Island, was nominated for the 1976 Governor General's Award, and "did for the people of Vancouver what ......William Faulkner [did] for the American south." (The Gazette, Montreal ). His first novel, The Invention of the World, published a year later, was hailed as the "major work of Canadian magic realism." (Canadian Fiction Magazine), and won the Gibson Literary Award. His second novel, The Resurrection of Joseph Bourne (1979), received still more critical praise and won the Governor General's Award. All three works are now in the New Canadian Library. His later books include Over Forty in Broken Hill (about his travels in Australia ) and A Passion for Narrative; a Guide for Writing Fiction, which has established itself as a perennial classic. He has been awarded the Canada - Australia Prize among many others, and has received an honorary degree from UBC. He is a "writer's writer's," greatly admired by his peers, and by an ever-widening circle of readers. |
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