My Famous Evening: Nova Scotia Sojourns, Diaries, and Preoccupations (Directions)
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Average customer review:Product Description
An evocative portrait of the landscape and eccentric characters who have shaped his literary work by the critically acclaimed author of The Bird Artist and The Northern Lights captures the world of Nova Scotia in a collection of folklore, poetry, reflections, anecdotes, stories, and essays.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #693301 in Books
- Published on: 2004-03-01
- Released on: 2004-03-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 224 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Norman shares his decades-long love affair with Nova Scotia in this latest addition to the National Geographic Directions series. Having traveled to the island in 1979 for work on a documentary film script, the author of The Bird Artist and The Northern Lights returns over the years, collecting myths and memories. In the book's first section, Norman relives the wanderlust of a young village woman, Marlais Quire, through the 1923 letters she writes to her sister. Enraptured with Joseph Conrad's work, Quire follows the writer to New York against her husband's wishes and her own better judgment. Quire never meets Conrad, but the struggle with her controlling husband and her literary passions lends insight to Nova Scotian smalltown life in the early 20th century. Later, Norman shares a number of stories about forerunners, eerie omens of tragedy well known to seafaring communities: "Forerunners, it seems to me, are examples of belief naturally infused with melancholy." Norman's love of bird-watching leads him to another folktale, concerning a mythic creature who protects locals from a troublesome bird that stirs up dangerous weather for oceangoers. Through his aviary interest, Norman also forges a friendship with Sandra Barry, a fellow bird-watcher and expert on the life of poet Elizabeth Bishop, who, as a child, was sent to live with her grandparents in Nova Scotia. The two retrace Bishop's steps: "I had wanted to sit all night in the kitchen of Elizabeth Bishop's house, candles lit, conversation between [my wife] and Sandra a kind of séance, bringing Miss Bishop into the present." Norman's collection is an out-of-the-ordinary pastiche of personal recollections and historical sketches. Map not seen by PW.-- and Sandra a kind of seance, bringing Miss Bishop into the present." Norman's collection is an out-of-the-ordinary pastiche of personal recollections and historical sketches. Map not seen by PW.
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From Booklist
Norman writes delectably atmospheric novels set in the snowy and mysterious reaches of Canada, such as The Haunting of L. (2002), and he now pays tribute to the landscape he loves the most, that of Nova Scotia, where "the distance between unconscious and conscious is scarcely noticeable." Several passions shape these gorgeously evocative, idiosyncratic, and witty musings. One is Norman's ardor for birds. Another is his keen interest in folklore, which led to his once scouring the region for stories about forerunners, that is, signs of impending disasters, as well as tales about the Mi'kmaq hero Glooskap. And, finally, there's his abiding love for literature. This inspires him to profile a freelance scholar devoted to chronicling poet Elizabeth Bishop's Nova Scotia childhood and to tell the astonishing story of a Nova Scotia woman who left her family to make the arduous journey to New York City to hear Joseph Conrad read. Rich in mystery, irony, and beauty, Norman's unique homage to Nova Scotia and its people is exactly what literature about place should be: utterly transporting. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Customer Reviews
Not impressed..
The author of this book is highly self absorbed and impressed with who he thinks he knows. This books has a lot of literary references as filler that have no relationship to Nova Scotia or the kind and simple people who reside there. The letters depicted in the 1st chapter are far more interesting in their style and humor than the author's own writing. Not sure where the title of this book comes from. The author is famous in his own mind and it doesn't translate well on the pages of this book or do justice to this very beautiful and scenic area.



