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A JOURNEY THROUGH CANADA'S FORGOTTEN, NEGLECTED AND SUPPRESSED WRITING
The new issue of Canadian Notes & Queries arrives at a busy time of year, which suits me just fine. I usually race through each issue, reading it from cover to cover, but am now forced to slow the pace and savour.
And so, all I've read thus far is Seth's regular column 'The Landscape.' The beginning raised a smile of self-recognition:
There are still a few places in Ontario where one can find shelves (or piles) of old second hand books for sale that have not been curated. Randomly acquired, roughly heaped into sections, and priced not by author and title but by paperback or hardcover status alone. These places are dwindling fast but I still know a few prime spots. Don't expect me to name them or tell you where they're located though. s if. I don't want you going there. These are my secret places. My old books! Keep out.
Seth's focus this time is The Canada Permanent Story, 1855-1955. "These corporate books weren't really meant to be perused," he writes, yet Seth has done just that, sharing this endpaper illustration:
| Garnett Weston 1890 - 1980 RIP |
Given that it's the season... Anyone looking for a last minute Christmas gift can't do much better than a subscription to Canadian Notes & Queries. I bought a couple. You can, too!Stephanie BolsterAlex BoydKornella DrianovakiMegan DurnfordStacey EastonAndré ForgetStephen FowlerAlex GoodRonald L GrimesBrett Joseph GrubisicLuke HathawayDavid HuebertMark Anthony JarmanKate KennedyAris KeshavM Travis LaneRohen MaitzenDancy MasonDavid MasonJeff MillerNofelJ R PattersonShazia Hafiz RamjiPatricia RobertsonNaben RuthnumCal SepuliaDrew TapleyRob TaylorCarl WattsBruce Whitman
The letter was headed by the letterhead, which of course served as a return address: "River Idyll Motel: Cabins and Cottages – Reasonable Prices." Tennie had neatly inked in the date under the slogan. But it was a mistake to use that stationary provided by the hotel. I should never have done that myself, even if it meant buying more paper. The very address had a touch of panic to it.
An immigrant from the United States to Canada comes always under the shadow of history – or to be specific, the shadow of Benedict Arnold. Arnold, who was considered to be a traitor to both king and Congress (an American easily forgets the first treachery)...
By ugly, I mean that which is offensively temporary. it is perfectly illustrated by the K-Mart Shopping Plaza (at the top of Smyth Street Hill in Fredericton, New Brunswick). It is self-evident that ugliness debases men. Unless he is made of very stern stuff indeed, a man will act under the influence of his surroundings. Put a man in prison - and he will act like a prisoner. Surround a man with the shoddy goods of contemporaneity, and he will act in proportion to their measure.
| K-Mart Shopping Plaza, Frederiction, 1968 |
I was eating a hot dog with relish and mustard when I heard this song which a youngster was playing – probably listening to the record on the pretence of buying it. Finishing my hot dog, and my coffee I inquired of a clerk about the song. That was a rather pleasant tune, I said. "Why," he said, as if surprised I didn't know, "that's Anne Murray."Boyd is so struck by the sweet songbird of Springhill that he not only buys the album (What About Me), but lays out a further $66.95 (nearly $415 today) in the purchase of a stereophonic record player in order to play it.
"Anne Murray?" I said.
He had divined that I was something of a stranger, and explained yo me thatAnne Murray had gone to the University of New Brunswick, "up the hill" and that she had graduated in 1966.
"You can't seriously mean you're going to deport all the Americans. Look you hired us to do a job. You can't turn us back when the job is finished!"
"Why not?" repeated Manners. "That's what one does to itinerant labour."
| Kent Elgin Thompson 2 February 1936, Waukegan, Illinois - 13 August 2021, Annapolis Royal , Nova Scotia |