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Canada

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
0 of 1 copy available

One of America's most revered literary figures, Richard Ford has won both the PEN/Faulkner Award and the Pulitzer Prize. Canada follows the trajectory of a 16-year-old boy whose life takes a dark turn. When the youth's parents are jailed for robbing a bank, he is spirited away from his home in Great Falls, Montana, to a small town in Saskatchewan. Completely out of his element and reeling from this sudden twist of fate, the boy struggles to adjust—even as he faces unexpected violence.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 5, 2012
      The first novel in six years from Pulitzer Prize winner (for Independence Day) Ford is a tragic rural farrago composed of two awkwardly joined halves. In the late 1950s, in Great Falls, Mont., teenage twins Dell and Berner Parson have different concerns: Berner’s is whether to run away with her boyfriend; Dell’s is chess and beekeeping. Their comically mismatched parents—rakish, smalltime schemer Bev and brooding, Jewish Neeva—have problems beyond a joyless union. Bev’s stolen beef scheme goes awry, leaving him owing his Cree Indian accomplices. In desperation he robs a bank, roping his wife into the crime, and Dell, peering back much later, chronicles every aspect of the intricate but misguided plan, which left his parent incarcerated and he and Berner alone. Berner runs away, and Dell ends up in the care of a shady family friend at a hunting lodge in Canada, living an even more barren and lonely existence than he had in Great Falls. The book’s first half has the makings of a succinct rural tragedy, but Dell’s inquisition of the past is so deliberate that it eventually moves from poignant to played out. The Canadian section has a mythic strangeness, but adds little, as Dell remains a passive witness to the foolhardy actions of adults. A book from Ford is always an event and his prose is assured and textured, but the whole is not heavily significant. Agent: Amanda Urban, ICM.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Strong sentences open this novel: ÒFirst, I'll tell you about the robbery our parents committed. Then about the murders, which happened later.Ó From the first, narrator Holter Graham takes command of Ford's words, pulling the listener into the story of 15-year-old Dell Parsons and the six weeks that should have destroyed him. Graham modulates his volume, tempo, and inflections to fit each situation, for example, speeding up and adding excitement to the moments leading up to Dell's parents' arrest and growing quieter and more contemplative as Dell reflects on the consequences of the path he was forced to take. Subtle accents and understated characterizations help distinguish individuals. Graham's perceptive interpretation of Dell's narrative envelops listeners in this unforgettable story of shattered innocence and a boy's determination to find normalcy. C.B.L. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2012, Portland, Maine

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