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Titles > Fiction > Doing The Heart Good


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Doing the Heart Good
by Neil Bissoondath 

Novel

Trade Paper
328 pages
5.5" X 8.5"
ISBN 1896951643
$19.95
Doing the Heart Good
by Neil Bissoondath 

Winner of the 2002 Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction.

"A breathless silence. Night creeping in beyond the trees, sky a dapple of blue on the darkening leaves. Stars appeared. I went to bed. They burned my home. So everything changes."

The beginning of Neil Bissoondath's Doing the Heart Good marks the end of a seventy-year-old man's independent life. Alistair Mackenzie — widower, father, grandfather, retired professor, lover of Dickens and good sherry — is forced to move in with his daughter and her family, bringing with him only a few medals, pyjamas that still bear the smell of smoke, and memory — that territory, alien and untrustworthy, unfailingly inhabited by a familiar stranger.

Seeking to come to terms with a life he has never anticipated, fearful of disappearing after his death, he examines significant episodes from his shattered past, revisiting a lifetime of love and quarrels, friendship and betrayal, war and peace. As he performs that strange and wonderful dance of moving forward while also looking back, the past begins to lend coherence to the confused present and to reveal the thread that connects him to his new future with his daughter, his son-in-law, and his grandson. A sedentary man quietly living out the final years of life, Alistair Mackenzie must learn how to adapt to his place in time — and how not to let the rest of his life pass him by, his family become strangers, his achievements be forgotten.

A novel of memory — of what it means, how it informs, how it can salvage tomorrow from the debris of yesterday — written at the very height of a great artist's power.

About Neil Bissoondath.
   



Reviews:
"The attention to character and narrative imagination are truly astonishing. Each anecdote could, in another writer's hands, have been an entire novel; ther condensation here lends Doing the Heart Good an impressive richness."
— The Vancouver Sun

"... a satisfying, old-fashioned read filled with social commentary, physical comedy and Alistair's memories of unforgettable people."
— The Gazette (Montreal)

"Bissoondath is acclaimed for his eloquent prose and this book is no exception."
— The Star Phoenix (Saskatoon)