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Pulitzer Prize-winning author Richard Ford's masterpiece A New York Times Notable Book 2012
Richard Ford was born in Jackson, Mississippi in 1944. He has published seven novels and three collections of stories, including The Sportswriter, Independence Day, A Multitude of Sins and, most recently, The Lay of the Land. Independence Day was awarded the Pulitzer Prize, and the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction, the first time the same book had won both prizes. Canada was awarded the Prix Femina du livre etranger in France in 2013.
A vast, magnificent canvas. This is one of the first great novels
of the 21st century
*Sunday Telegraph*
Astonishing ... Reviewers will be quick to proclaim that Richard
Ford has written a great American novel, another masterpiece, and
he most emphatically has. Canada is his finest work to date ... A
powerfully human and profound novel that makes one sigh, shudder
and weep. Here is greatness. No doubt about it
*Eileen Battersby, Irish Times*
Ford is possessed of a writer's greatest gifts ... Pure vocal
grace, quiet humor, precise and calm observation ... Ford's
language is of the cracked, open spaces and their corresponding
places within
*Lorrie Moore, New Yorker*
The emotional power of Richard Ford’s Canada arises from a sense of
grief and loss embedded in the writing, and the imaginative sweep
of the book, which enters the spirit of a sensitive, vulnerable and
intelligent teenage boy and by implication enters the spirit of
America itself
*Guardian, Books of the Year*
By far the novel of the year: everything that can be good and great
and true in fiction is expressed with an unnervingly eloquent
humanity in this devastating masterwork ... Ford’s art draws its
strength from his relaxed, rhythmic prose and his astute
observations of human nature
*Irish Times Book of the Year*
I like the weight and the heft of Canada by Richard Ford. It is
written with a quiet, hypnotic brilliance that almost had me
weeping with envy. I particularly like the opening lines, which
take you by the throat and drag you through the narrative
*Guardian, Books of the Year*
His most elegiac and profound book yet ... Marilynne Robinson
(without the theology) and Cormac McCarthy (without the gore)
*Washington Post*
One of the wonderful things about Richard Ford is that he can make
people who do outlandish things, such as rob banks, seem almost
normal ... Ford is superb at suspense ... This is a book about
dysfunctional lives in a North America that existed half a century
ago - it sometimes has the feel of Truman Capote's In Cold Blood.
What a backdrop - you feel as if anything might happen here ...
This is a story about adolescence, about crime, about broken
families, and about trying to escape. It's very engaging, and in
the end, quite sad
*William Leith, Evening Standard*
A real king returns ... a story, and a vision, as sweeping as its
landscapes
*Boyd Tonkin, Independent*
His books will save you
*GQ*
A scrupulously rendered coming-of-age story
*Anthony Cummins, Sunday Telegraph*
The strength of the book is Ford's examination of flawed
fatherhood, of the failures that push Dell into an uneasy maturity,
one that allows him to achieve what remains the modest but profound
goal of Ford's fiction: simply, to make a life ... his coda is as
precise and measured as anything he has conjured before. The end,
like a piece of origami, could fold right into the beginning of
Ford's greatest novel, The Sportswriter. The sombre and gorgeous
final two thirds of Canada rest next to Ford's best fiction
*Craig Taylor, The Times*
A true master of the modern American novel
*Independent*
Exceptional American novel ... Breathtaking ... its unique shape
disconcerts and enchants the reader equally
*Spectator*
Richard Ford's arresting new novel is - on one level - an
intriguing variation on this American Childhood Gets Derailed theme
... as this highly original voice begins to take hold, you find
yourself drawn into Ford's uneasy, ever-skewed, narrative world.
It's a world which speaks volumes about the reclusiveness and
violence at the heart of the American experience - which, like the
solitary terrain, engulfs those who try to find a sense of self or
meaning amid its hard-scrabble vacuity. Audacious in its narrative
technique (observes Ford's frequent use of short chapters, his
varied pacing, the way he never rushes any plot points, and allows
the story to unfold in its own enigmatic way), Canada both grips
and haunts
*Douglas Kennedy, Independent*
As opening lines go, they're corkers. The rest of the novel is
quieter than you'd imagine but it amply fulfils their promise ...
The result is prose so sonorous in its melancholy insightfulness
that you'll want to linger over each sentence. Meanwhile, the story
itself - a tale of what happens when uncrossable lines are crossed
- will have you turning its pages ever faster
*Daily Mail*
Although its subjects are disarray and bewilderment, there is
barely a dishevelled sentence in this awesomely calm book ...
Canada is soaked in a subtle sadness, then, born of the
foreknowledge of error and loss, and reading it isn't always easy.
But we persist despite ourselves, because of the beckoning fluency
of Ford's prose and the painful sharpness of his insights ... Ford
has always been a clarifier, slowly making lucid the lines of the
everyday. Canada is perhaps his most transparent novel yet: shorn
of tricks, sparse and expansive as the plains on which it is set
... By looking "straight at things", Ford has written another novel
about the fine lines that separate the humdrum and the calamitous,
and about those schisms of existence that can be anticipated only
in retrospect
*Sunday Times*
***** A superb stand-alone novel from Richard Ford
*Metro*
Ford really excels in his virtuoso command of narrative suspense
... each part of Canada is superb in its own way ... [Ford is] a
serious artist
*New York Review of Books*
The most fulfilling read of the year
*Guardian Readers’ Books of the Year*
The life of 15-year-old Dell Parsons is thrown into chaos when he is sent from Montana to live in Canada after his parents are arrested for bank robbery. The novel's first half circles his parents' disgrace, examining it from so many angles that the cumulative effect becomes a bit monotonous. Dell's struggle to find himself amid the beauty and dangers of rural Canada is more compelling. Holter Graham's youthful voice, fitting for the boy's first-person narration, perfectly captures Dell's mixture of innocence, confusion, curiosity, and guilt. VERDICT This program should appeal to those drawn to unusual coming-of-age tales. ["Segmented into three parts, the narrative slowly builds into a gripping commentary on life's biggest question: Why are we here? Ford's latest work successfully expands our understanding of and sympathy for humankind," read the review of the HarperCollins hc, LJ 1/12.-Ed.]-Michael Adams, CUNY Graduate Ctr. Lib. (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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