Gør som tusindvis af andre bogelskere
Tilmeld dig nyhedsbrevet og få gode tilbud og inspiration til din næste læsning.
Ved tilmelding accepterer du vores persondatapolitik.Du kan altid afmelde dig igen.
A twenty-one-year-old would-be writer, John Passfield, spends his last few months as a garbage collector on the streets of his home town, St. Thomas, Ontario, in the summer of Canada's Centennial year, 1967. As he works, he captures the imagery of his life so far -- and of his upcoming marriage and pending career as a high school teacher -- to the imagery of the great books he is reading, all while in pursuit of building the perfect load of garbage.
The onslaught of the COVID-19 pandemic leads to the cancellation of a renowned quartet's planned performance of Schubert's Quintet in C. But the group continues to practice, in hopes of at least an eventual private performance, and in an effort to draw the musicians closer together and improve their music-making, Boris -- the group's founder and cellist -- asks each of them to keep and share diary entries, from which he'll choose a daily entry as a record of the journey they are making together, and yet apart.So begins Plague Year, the latest novel by Hamilton writer Peter Abbot. Written as a series of diary entries and emails, Plague Year affords an intimate glimpse into the impact of a global pandemic at a personal level. The result is a poignant chronicle of a world-altering event as reflected in miniature in everyday life, written with grace and empathy.A sample from Chapter One ...Friday 3rd April 2020 / JENNYI'm surprised that the newspaper is still being delivered. I must try to thank the newsboy - if I talk to him from this side of the front-door, surely I would be far enough away, but maybe I shouldn't give him a tip - they say that type of physical contact could transmit the virus or whatever it is - but at least I could say Thank You at arm's length, surely? I wonder when he delivers the newspaper? Probably too early for me to get to the front-door, maybe I should pin a thank-you note to the screen-door? But if he stops delivery, I wouldn't really miss it - the CBC News on the radio is enough, more than enough, these days, I think! In fact, there's a lot of things that clutter one's life which, I confess, I wouldn't really miss.But what a shock when I did read the newspaper - I saw the main headline, "We're in a race against time", so then I read, in the end, almost everything there - and as I say, what a shock to see how the whole COVID-19 situation, here in Hamilton, is much much more serious than I knew. That disturbed me all day on and off - I could hardly concentrate on what I was reading - and then on TV in the evening, the news under the screen had this: "80K COVID-19 CASES IN ONT. BY APRIL 30" - and in the American news in the CBC newscast, "Trump orders US Company to stop exporting masks to Canada" - just when it seems wearing a mask - I haven't got one - is likely to become mandatory even in the supermarket. As I say, all a shock to me, and no doubt to many Canadians.And it's a real pity about the Schubert Quintet, I was really looking forward to that - the rehearsals and the three performances - they're such a good Quartet, one of the best, otherwise they wouldn't be in such demand to go on tours in Europe as well as Canada. I was lucky to be invited because they needed an extra cello for the Schubert - which I love! It was Anna who arranged the invitation, I think - she has played Second Violin in the Quartet for quite a few years, and I know that Boris, who started it after he came to Canada with his parents, all those years ago - they were refugees, I think - has said how much he admires her playing, he told me that - I had a sort of interview with him, he's an old man and he did make some strange comments, I thought - Anna said he had been a refugee from I think she said Hungary and came to Canada as a boy or young man, with his parents who had been members of a major orchestra. He has a strong accent! But I had no problem understanding him. He's tough, I think, and of course he has very high standards. I played movements from Bach, the third cello suite, which I have always loved, and he grunted and said I'd "do".
Inspired by nature and religion, Neil Paul and Sheldon H. Clark collaborate in Voices Extended to present this moving and evocative collection of poems. As Alan Bishop of McMaster University writes in his preface, "Both poets express their thoughts and emotions succinctly and memorably. Sheldon Clark's poems are forcefully direct, often focus sharply on religious themes, and frequently use repetition to strengthen emotion. Neil Paul's poems are characteristically quieter and apparently simple, restrained, as they soberly observe and comment on the natural and familial. Brought together in one volume, these two sets of poems complement each other effectively, deepening meaning and strengthening the pleasure they can give to attentive readers." Evocative photographs and line drawings enhance the volume.
A moving collection of poetry designed to inspire contemplation and nourish the soul ..."In Still Voices the sensitive reader will encounter a wide range of place and time-from standing by a pond at dawn before beginning farm work, to hearing the ancient echo of liturgy in a stone abbey. The contemplative reader will find sacred space in the author's interior reading of Psalms. All will know that Sheldon Clark is a person of faith, whose deep engagement with sacred text opens to the voice of Divine Providence, which we, too, are able to hear. This is a beautiful book-there is a black and white image on every page to provide exquisite visual setting for each poem. I heartily endorse Still Voices as poetry to lighten our path." -Rev. F. Gardiner Perry, D. Min. Member of the Board of Trustees of the Center for Swedenborgian Studies at the Graduate Theological Union Berkeley, California"Sheldon Clark's volume Still Voices offers a sensitive articulation for such a time as this. His meditative style is rooted in ancient scripture but offers a comforting wisdom that our generation needs to hear. In his poetry Clark awakens our senses to inhabit the subtle movements of nature. Honest to the rhythms of life this volume arouses the wisdom of a contemporary sage who, in his poetry, guides us on the spiritual paths of grace. Reading the poems in this volume evokes the joy and sorrow, the triumphs and tragedies of life. Readers will find it to be spiritually uplifting as they connect with the expression of an interior vision of life with God. I am so pleased to have gained the acquaintance of the author and to celebrate the publication of this book of poetry. I hope others will find its refreshment and spiritual nurture in the way that I did." -Phil C. Zylla, D.Th., Vice President, Academic, Professor of Pastoral Theology, J. Gordon and Margaret Warnock Jones Chair in Church and Ministry, McMaster Divinity College
"Earth continues to travel in a slightly elliptical orbit around the sun, but some years ago the world started veering to the right."So observes Robert Brym in his introduction to this fifth volume of the proceedings of the S.D. Clark Symposium on the Future of Canadian Society. The aim of the collection is to examine anti-Black racism, Islamophobia, and antisemitism in Canada today, particularly in the context of the rise of right-wing populist movements in Canada and around the world. Abdolmohammad Kazemipur, Akwasi Owusu-Bempah and Carl E. James, Morton Weinfeld, Neda Maghbouleh, and Brym himself draw on the latest research to examine the patterns of prejudice and discrimination that continue to persist in Canadian society. Racism, Islamophobia, Antisemitism and the Future of Canadian Society gathers together the revised proceedings of the fifth S.D. Clark Symposium on the Future of Canadian Society. The Symposium, hosted by the Department of Sociology of the University of Toronto, honours the memory of S.D. Clark, the department's first chair and one of Canada's leading sociologists of the twentieth century.
Growing up in British Guiana in the 1930s and ''40s ...In Demerara Sugar, author Pam Walters provides a child''s-eye view of British Guiana -- the British Empire''s only foothold on the South American continent -- that is by turns poignant, humorous and insightful. The sugar plantations of the Guianese region of Demerara were integral to the economy of the Empire. Expatriate English, Scots and Irish managed a plantation economy only possible with the work of field labour and a colonial society of merchants, teachers and government officialdom."All are childhood memories and what I gleaned from Kitchen-talk and word-of mouth stories from the people around me at the time," the author writes of the sources of her narrative. "[Those people] were the descendants of slaves who had been taken to Enmore from the slave ships and whose families had always lived there."With an unerring eye for detail, the author depicts her own at times eccentric family and household, against the broader backdrop of growing up on a sugar plantation 1930s and ''40s. She mines memories of her childhood with clarity and regard for the class and racial divisions of the day, deftly weaving together her recollections with the historical details of the period.The result is a complex, entertaining and resonant memoir.Includes 24 period photographs
Tilmeld dig nyhedsbrevet og få gode tilbud og inspiration til din næste læsning.
Ved tilmelding accepterer du vores persondatapolitik.