Skip to content

Two Solitudes (New Canadian Library)
Click for full-size.

Two Solitudes (New Canadian Library) Trade paperback - 2008

by Maclennan, Hugh

  • Used
  • as new
  • Paperback

Description

Toronto, Ontario, Canada : New Canadian Library, 2008. Trade Paperback. As New. Like New - May Have Minor Shelf Wear To Edges. - For More Information On Condition. Please See All Photos. - "Northwest Of Montreal, Through A Valley Always In Sight Of The Low Mountains Of The Laurentian Shield, The Ottawa River Flows Out Of Protestant Ontario Into Catholic Quebec. It Comes Down Broad And Ale-Coloured And Joins The Saint Lawrence, The Two Streams Embrace The Pan Of Montreal Island, The Ottawa Merges And Loses Itself, And The Main-Stream Moves Northeastward A Thousand Miles To Sea." With These Words Hugh Maclennan Begins His Powerful Saga Of Athanase Tallard, The Son Of An Aristo-Cratic French-Canadian Tradition, Of Kathleen, His Beautiful Irish Wife, And Of Their Son Paul, Who Struggles To Establish A Balance In Himself And In The Country He Calls Home. First Published In 1945, And Set Mostly In The Time Of The First World War, Two Solitudes Is A Classic Novel Of Individuals Working Out The Latest Stage In Their Embroiled History.
New
NZ$23.23
NZ$19.90 Shipping to USA
Standard delivery: 4 to 8 days
More Shipping Options
Ships from Alright Bookstore (Alberta, Canada)

Details

  • Title Two Solitudes (New Canadian Library)
  • Author Maclennan, Hugh
  • Binding Trade Paperback
  • Condition New
  • Pages 528
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher New Canadian Library, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  • Date 2008
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 001071
  • ISBN 9780771093586 / 0771093586
  • Weight 0.8 lbs (0.36 kg)
  • Dimensions 7.7 x 5.2 x 1.2 in (19.56 x 13.21 x 3.05 cm)
  • Dewey Decimal Code FIC

About Alright Bookstore Alberta, Canada

Biblio member since 2022
Seller rating: This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.

Welcome to Alright Bookstore, your online haven for a diverse selection of books, nestled in the heart of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. As a small, internet-exclusive bookshop, we pride ourselves on our commitment to ensuring complete satisfaction with every purchase. Our friendly team is always on hand to respond to your queries about our stock. At Alright Bookstore, we don't just sell books, we strive to create a seamless and enjoyable book-buying experience for you. Your satisfaction is our guarantee.

Terms of Sale: For additional information regarding any of our listed items, please do not hesitate to contact us. All prices are stated in US dollars and apply uniformly to all customers. We exercise utmost diligence in packaging to ensure the safe transit of your purchase. However, in the unlikely event that a book is damaged during transit or if you find our description of its condition to be unsatisfactory, we offer a return policy at our expense. Please note that, barring the aforementioned circumstances, all sales are considered final. We appreciate your understanding in this matter. We look forward to serving you.

Browse books from Alright Bookstore

From the publisher

A major 20th century Canadian author, Hugh MacLennan was born in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, in 1907. His seven novels and many essays and travel books present a chronicle of Canada that often mediates between the old world of its European cultural heritage and the new world of American vitality and materialism. Among his many honours, he won five Governor General’s Awards. Hugh MacLennan died in Montreal in 1990.


From the Paperback edition.

Categories

Excerpt

One

Northwest of Montreal, through a valley always in sight of the low mountains of the Laurentian Shield, the Ottawa River flows out of Protestant Ontario into Catholic Quebec. It comes down broad and ale-coloured and joins the Saint Lawrence, the two streams embrace the pan of Montreal Island, the Ottawa merges and loses itself, and the mainstream moves northeastward a thousand miles to the sea.

Nowhere has nature wasted herself as she has here. There is enough water in the Saint Lawrence alone to irrigate half of Europe, but the river pours right out of the continent into the sea. No amount of water can irrigate stones, and most of Quebec is solid rock. It is as though millions of years back in geologic time a sword had been plunged through the rock from the Atlantic to the Great Lakes and savagely wrenched out again, and the pure water of the continental reservoir, unmuddied and almost useless to farmers, drains untouchably away. In summer the cloud packs pass over it in soft, cumulus, pacific towers, endlessly forming and dissolving to make a welter of movement about the sun. In winter when there is no storm the sky is generally empty, blue and glittering over the ice and snow, and the sun stares out of it like a cyclops’ eye.

All the narrow plain between the Saint Lawrence and the hills is worked hard. From the Ontario border down to the beginning of the estuary, the farmland runs in two delicate bands along the shores, with roads like a pair of village main streets a thousand miles long, each parallel to the river. All the good land was broken long ago, occupied and divided among seigneurs and their sons, and then among tenants and their sons. Bleak wooden fences separate each strip of farm from its neighbour, running straight as rulers set at right angles to the river to form long narrow rectangles pointing inland. The ploughed land looks like the course of a gigantic and empty steeplechase where all motion has been frozen. Every inch of it is measured, and brooded over by notaries, and blessed by priests.

You can look north across the plain from the river and see the farms between their fences tilting toward the forest, and beyond them the line of trees crawling shaggily up the slope of the hills. The forest crosses the watershed into an evergreen bush that spreads far to the north, lake-dotted and mostly unknown, until it reaches the tundra. The tundra goes to the lower straits of the Arctic Ocean. Nothing lives on it but a few prospectors and hard- rock miners and Mounted Policemen and animals and the flies that brood over the barrens in summer like haze. Winters make it a universe of snow with a terrible wind keening over it, and beyond its horizons the northern lights flare into walls of shifting electric colours that crack and roar like the gods of a dead planet talking to each other out of the dark.

But down in the angle at Montreal, on the island about which the two rivers join, there is little of this sense of new and endless space. Two old races and religions meet here and live their separate legends, side by side. If this sprawling halfcontinent has a heart, here it is. Its pulse throbs out along the rivers and railroads; slow, reluctant and rarely simple, a double beat, a self-moved reciprocation.

About the author

A major 20th century Canadian author, Hugh MacLennan was born in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, in 1907. His seven novels and many essays and travel books present a chronicle of Canada that often mediates between the old world of its European cultural heritage and the new world of American vitality and materialism. Among his many honours, he won five Governor General's Awards. Hugh MacLennan died in Montreal in 1990.