Dimensions
144 x 210 x 23mm
Two-time National Book Award finalist Howard Norman shares a unique look at the place that shaped his fiction - a raw landscape brimming with eccentric characters and bizarre situations.
Master storyteller Howard Norman draws on more than 30 years of visiting Nova Scotia for this remarkable "book of selective memories."
Combining stories, folklore, memoir, nature, poetry, and expository prose, the chapters of this book "may be seen as intersecting facets of reminiscence; there are certain refrains, themes, and preoccupations and I placed birds into as many of the book's nooks and crannies as possible." His goal: to portray the emotional dimensions of his experience.
The chapter entitled 'My Famous Evening' is the story of Marlais Quire, a young woman who scandalously left her home in Nova Scotia in 1923 to travel to New York in an ill-fated attempt to attend a public reading by Joseph Conrad. 'Life, Death, And The Sea' gathers locals' thoughts on superstitions, fate, and belief. There's also the delightful 'Birder's Notebook', a collection of stories about the Mi'kmaq cultural hero, Glooskap, and an account of Leon Trotsky's 1915 visit to Halifax, after a year of exile in New York, "on his way to the October Revolution".
For Norman, Nova Scotia is a place that provides a deep calm but also a "sudden noir in the heart". Illustrated with photographs from Norman's own collection, 'My Famous Evening' is a delightful, witty and characteristically quirky take on a curious and beguiling region.