The old year dies! Of this be sure,The old leaves rot beneath the snow.The old skies falter from the blowDealt by the heavens that shall endureWhen sky and leaf together go.And some are glad and some are grieved.Much as when some poor mortal dies;The first sensation of surpriseIs lost in sobs of his bereaved.Or cold relief with dry-dust eyes,That view his coffin absently,And wonder first how much it cost,And next, how came his fortune lost,And how will live his family.And how he looked when he was crost.But tears—no, no—they only surgeFrom those who knew him. They were few;He had his faults; he seldom knewThe thing to say, condemn, or urge;Tis better he has gone from view.So neither do we weep—God knows,We have but little time for tears!A time for hopes, a time for fears,A time for strife, a time for woesWe have—but hardly time for tears.O it were good, and it were sweet.If we might weep our fill somewhere,In other world, in purer air,Perhaps in heaven's golden street,Perhaps upon its crystal stair!For "power and leave to weep" shall beThe golden city's legend dear;Though wiped away be every tear.First for a season shall flow freeThe floods that leave the vision clear!So if we could we would, Old Year,Conjure a tear up when you go,And pace in solemn order slowBehind your gray and cloud -borne bier,Draped with the wan and fluttering snow.Yet what is it, this year we miss?An arbitrary thing, a mark;A rapid writing in the dark;Dead wire, that with a futile hissStrikes back no single answering spark.There is no year, we dream and say,Again, no year, we say and dream,And dumbly note the frozen stream,And note the bird on barren spray.And note the cold, though bright sunbeam.We quarrel with the times and hours,The year should end—we say—when comeThe last long rolls of March's drum.And too—we say—with grass and flowersShould rise the New Year, like to someGay antique goddess, ever young,With pallid shoulders touched with rose,Firm waist that mystic zones enclose,White feet from violets shyly sprung.Her raiment—that the high gods chose.And yet the poet, born to preachWith yearning for his human kind,His verse but sermon undefined,Will fail in what he means to teach,If he proclaim not, high designed,
The Old Year dies! It is enough!And he has won, for eyes grow dimAs passeth slow his pageant grim,And many a hand both fair and roughShall wipe away a tear for him—For him, and for the wasted hours,The sinful days, the moments weak.The words we did or did not speak,The weeds that crowded out our flowers,The blessings that we did not seek.
31 December 2022
'The Dying Year' by S. Frances Harrison
26 December 2022
The Very Best Reads of 2022: Ladies First
Late last night, as Christmas festivities drew to a close, I pulled Victor Lauriston's The Twenty-first Burr (Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1922) from the shelves. It seemed appropriate way to end the holiday. One hundred years earlier, my copy was presented by the author to a woman named Olive Shanks.
This was a year unlike any other in Dusty Bookcase history. For the first time, women wrote a majority of the titles; twelve of the twenty-two reviewed here and in the pages of Canadian Notes and Queries.
Sara Jeannette Duncan's A Daughter of To-day and Joanna E. Wood's The Untempered Wind stand well above the other twenty. Both are available in Tecumseh's Early Canadian Women Writers Series, which goes some way in explaining how it is that only male authors feature in my annual selection of the three books most deserving of a return to print:
Toronto: S.B. Gundy, 1915
It's the stuff of a Leacock story.
As series editor of Véhicule Press's Ricochet imprint, I was involved in reviving Arthur Mayse's 1949 debut novel Perilous Passage. 'Telling the Story,' the introduction provided by the author's daughter, Susan Mayse, is one of my favourite in the series. Reprinted in Canadian Notes & Queries, it can be read through this link.
Recognition this year goes to England's Handheld Press for its reissue of Marjorie Grant's 1921 novel Latchkey Ladies.
Finally, sadly, I report that the New Year's resolutions made last December didn't go far:
- I resolved to focus more on francophone writers, yet read just one: Philippe-Joseph Aubert de Gaspé (and then only in translation).
- I resolved to feature more non-fiction, and yet this writer of non-fiction reviewed nothing but fiction.
- I resolved to keep kicking against the pricks. This was easily done. Witnessing the miscreants of the Freedom Convoy roll past on its way to Ottawa gave extra incentive.
Here's to the New Year!
Bonne année!
The Very Best Reads of the Second Plague Year (2021)
The Very Best Reads of a Plague Year (2020)
The Very Best Reads of a Very Strange Year (2019)
Best Books of 2018 (none of which are from 2018)
The Year's Best Books in Review - A.D. 2017
The Year's Best Books in Review - A.D. 2016
The Year's Best Books in Review - A.D. 2015
The Christmas Offering of Books - 1914 and 2014
A Last Minute Gift Slogan, "Give Books" (2013)
Grumbles About Gumble & Praise for Stark House (2012)
The Highest Compliments of the Season (2011)
A 75-Year-Old Virgin and Others I Acquired (2010)
Books are Best (2009)
25 December 2022
'Christmas' by S. Frances Harrison
Who will sing the Christ?Will he who rang his Christmas chimesOf faith and hope in Gospel ray,That pealed along the world's highway,And woke the world to purer times—Will he sing the Christ?Or that new voice which vaguely gives—One day its song for Rome—the next,In soul-destroying strife perplextFor England's faith and future livesShall he sing the Christ?Or the sweet children in the schools,That hymn their carols hand-in-handAll purely, can they understandThe wisdom that must make us fools—Can they sing the Christ?Or yearning priest who to his kindFrom carven pulpit gives the Word,Or praying mother who has erred,And blindly led her erring blind—Have they not sung the Christ?"Lord! I of sinners am the chief!"One, seated by his Christmas fires,Hearkens the bells from distant spires,But hangs his head in unbelief—He cannot sing the Christ.Grant to such, Lord, the seeing eye!Grant as the World grows old and cold,All hearts Thy beauty may behold.Grant, lest the souls of sinners die—That All may sing the Christ.
Merry Christmas from our home to yours!
19 December 2022
The Ten Best Book Buys of 2022 (plus gifts!)
I'm betting it was worth every penny and that Lisa and considerate, gentle, sophisticated Bobbie will not disappoint.
"What?" I hear you say. "You mean you haven't read it!"
No, I have not. Too busy.... so busy that I didn't visit the Strand during last month's trip to New York. I did find time for Trump Tower, but only because it was so close to my hotel. I expected to be underwhelmed, and was more than underwhelmed. This was during the weekend of the New York City Marathon, and yet the place was nearly deserted.
Each of this year's ten best book buys was found online, which is a sad state of affairs given recent travels. These are the remaining nine:
Toronto: Ryerson, 1959
Jeann Beattie won the Ryerson Fiction Award for Blaze of Noon (1950), her debut novel. Behold the Hour, her second and last, is set in the early days of CBC television. I didn't think much of the novel, but illustrator Ken Elliott's dust jacket is a favourite.
New York: Appleton, 1894
What did I expect? At twenty-one, I read Duncan's classic, The Imperialist, but remember nothing.
Not only a beautiful volume, but one of the year's two best reads.
The author's first novel. Published twenty years before he gave up the United States for Canada, it is set in Greenwich Village and concerns fallout stemming from the murder of a local pusher. Did I read somewhere that one of the characters is based on Schwartz's friend Jackson Pollack?
Another favourite cover, it graces the hidden debut novel of a woman who would one day win the 1954 Stephen Leacock Medal for Pardon My Parka and the 1957 Ryerson Fiction Award for Repent at Leisure. I liked the novel for its depiction of a time and place in which one could make a decent living as a writer.
As Ricochet Books series editor, I've returned two Wees novels to print. Lost House, a gothic thriller involving drug runners in remote British Columbia looked to be a possible third. Sadly, it is not one of the author's best.
The second book ever published by Harlequin!
Phyllis Brett Young published six books between 1959 and 1969 — and then nothing in the remaining twenty-seven years of her life. One wonders what happened. A Question of Judgement, her last, was first published in 1969 by Macmillan of Canada. This British edition, which appeared the following year, has the better cover.
Here's looking forward to next year's book purchases.
Here's hoping some will be found in physical book stores.
12 December 2022
Ten Kicks at the Can for A.E. van Vogt
A.E. van Vogt
New York: Signet, 1958
I began this book wondering if I hadn't been too hard on A.E. van Vogt. Science fiction was an adolescent passion, and like so many abandoned in adulthood – superhero comics being the prime example – I can be overly critical.
A decade passed. I felt no urge to give van Vogt another try, which is not to say that I wasn't curious. Surely he couldn't be so bad a writer as all that; after all, the man was a graduate of the Palmer Institute of Authorship.
Popular Mechanics, June 1949 |
A master of time myself, I finished with three weeks to spare.
Destination: Universe proved to be one of 2022's weakest books, but was not nearly so difficult to get through as Jeann Beattie's Blaze of Noon or Mrs Savigny's A Romance of Toronto. Most of its ten stories get off to a running start, propelling the reader for at least a couple of pages. But they soon become bogged down in a problem faced by the protagonist and his various attempts to find a solution. There's a good amount of repetition, explanation, and description of some future technology or other.
The 1953 first Signet edition. |
Renfrew loses his mind and van Vogt loses his way.
Of the ending, Colin Wilson wrote that van Vogt had "no idea of how to finish his story."
"He turned. His horny body towered above the man."
Within the pages of my copy I found this bookmark for Canadian Children's Literature. It appears to date from 1997.
The collection was first published by Pellegrini & Cudahy in 1952 as Destination: Universe! Signet dropped the exclamation mark for this printing. There have been many other editions from many other publishers over the years, but as far as I can determine the collection is currently out of print.
Used copies are numerous and cheap.
Destination: Universe! has been translated into French (Destination univers), Italian (Destinazione universo), Romanian (Destinat̨ia univers), and Swedish (Destination universum).
09 December 2022
02 December 2022
Best Books of 1922: Amidst a Flood of Mediocrity
Published one hundred years ago today, the 1922 Globe round-up of the year's noteworthy books doesn't display much by way of enthusiasm. The three pages – previous years had five – begin with a reference to something once said by long-dead Englishman George Crabbe. It really sets the tone:
The trend may be away from fiction, but fiction makes for nearly half of the Globe's list. And I can't help but note that not one science title features.
The newspaper's greatest focus is on "GENERAL FICTION," by which it means fiction that is not Canadian. Babbit is recognized as the year's big title. I can't quibble because I still haven't read it. I have read The Beautiful and Damned, which doesn't feature.
My copies of the first Canadian editions |
The Return of Blue Pete - Luke Allan [Lacey Amy]Flowing Gold - Rex BeachChalk Talks - J.W. BengoughIndian Legends of Vancouver Island - Alfred CarmichaelGod's Green Country - Ethel M. ChapmanKing's Arrow - H.A. CodyCaste - W.A. FraserPagan Love - John Murray GibbonD'Arcy Conyers - Bertal HeeneyMortimer's Gold - Harold HornThe Timber Pirate - Charles Christopher JenkinsThe Bells of St Stephens - Marian KeithThe Dust Flower - Basil KingThe Twenty-first Burr - Victor LauristonOpenway - Archie P. McKinshieOver 'ere and Back Home - P. O'DTillicums of the Trail - George C.F. PringlePoisoned Paradise - Robert W. ServiceNeighbors - Robert SteadThe Prairie Child - Arthur StringerSalt Seas and Sailormen - Frederick William WallaceThe Shack Locker - Frederick William Wallace
My collection of the Globe's 1922 Canadian fiction titles. |
Four that didn't make the list. |
Really?
Most Canadian novels dating from this time have rural settings.
More, please?
The Globe is most complimentary in its opinion of Canadian verse, but not before taking a dig at the Mother Country: "In Britain, during the past year, deflation has not been confined to finance, and poetry scarcely rises above the horizon." But Canada, young Canada, imbued with "national sentiment stimulated by the war, receives refreshing satisfaction from the study of the poet's message."
Nine of the fourteen volumes of verse are Canadian:
Jean Blewett's Poems - Jean BlewettComplete Poems of Wilfred Campbell - Wilfred CampbellContrasts - Lawren HarrisComplete Poems of Archibald Lampman - Archibald LampmanFires of Driftwood - Isabel Ecclestone MackayThe Woodcarver's Wife and Later Poems - Marjorie L. PickthallChrist in the Strand and Other Poems - James A. RoyVerse and Reverse - Toronto Women's Press Club
Of the forty-seven, Over Prairie Trails by Frederick Philip Grove is in print today as a New Canadian Library title. New Canadian Library being no more, it's old stock now housed somewhere in a Penguin Random House warehouse.
What else is in print?
Nothing?
Oh, Canada.
Cyril's family is unaware that he and his cabinet-maker employee are making and selling false antique furniture. It is only when he dies and his salesman Bernie marries his widow Julie that the truth comes out through Cecil re-appearing as a parrot, puzzlingly given as a wedding gift. When a local Brighton heavy realises he's been conned the family band together to try and fix things.