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Titles > Fiction >
Cumberland

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Cumberland
by Michael
V. Smith
Novel
202 pages
Trade Paper w/ French Flaps
4.5" X 7.5"
ISBN: 1896951368
$19.95
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Cumberland
by Michael
V. Smith
Shortlisted:
2003 Amazon/Books In Canada First Novel Award
A stunning first novel full of empathy, marked by an astounding
maturity of insight. Cumberland is both a place and a state of mind;
it is a small-town story of longing and loss in the manner of David
Adams Richards. It is an exploration of loneliness and the fear
of loneliness in lives limited by circumstance.
Cumberland is an industrial town located halfway between Ottawa
and Montreal on the shore of the St. Lawrence River. It's facing
the close of its factories and mills in the wake of the North American
Free Trade Agreement. Ernest, a mill worker whose job is lost when
the mill closes, is fifty-two; his employment prospects are poor.
His life to this point hasn't equipped him to face any more loss.
Longing for companionship, he meets Bea, a waitress at Malouf's,
the local pub. Bea lives in an apartment with Amanda, who left home
at seventeen because she couldnąt live with her mother and stepfather.
Yearning for a better life, Amanda develops a crush on Nick, Ernest's
drinking buddy, who represents many aspects of a better life
he has a Range Rover, owns a house he is emotionally unavailable
to Amanda, being a recently widowed single father.
The lives of Ernest, Bea, Amanda, Nick, and his son Aaron come together,
fall apart, and come together again in this memorable and emotionally
satisfying novel.
About Michael V. Smith. |
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| Reviews: |
"It's
easy to see what impressed the readers at Cormorant. Smith...has
a keen command of small-town life...He skillfully captures the close
emotional ties between those who live in the industrial town, facing
the closure of its mills and factories in the wake of NAFTA, and
he demonstrates a keen awareness of the rhythms of exonomic downturn
and alcoholism."
The Vancouver Sun
"There are remarkable insights in this novel. Smith has a touch
with dialogue that makes his characters come alive. Just as he probes
and gets under their skins, their stories get under ours and leave
us wishing we could see how it all turns out."
The Star-Phoenix (Saskatoon)
"The multi-gifted Smith
tells the story plainly, and
it's extremely effective. His characters' stories of love and loss
have so much emotional impact that they don't need embellishment.
Sometimes
a book creeps up on you. Thats what happens with Cumberland,
a novel that starts out as just another day in the bar for middle
aged millworker Ernest but soon enters more explosive areas."
NOW Magazine |
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