________________
CM . . . .
Volume VII Number 4 . . . . October 20, 2000
The "Five Great Tales" in question are Doyle's previously published books: Uncle Ronald,
Angel Square, Easy Avenue, The Covered Bridge, and Up to Low. They cover the time
period from 1895 until just after the Second World War. Some characters appear in more than
one book, including Nerves, the dog who mirrors the emotions of whomever he is with. (The
dust
jacket calls him "the most unforgettable dog in Canadian literature" - a bit of literary hyperbole
excusable only if the perpetrator has never encountered Farley Mowat's Mutt!) It makes for quite
a feast of Doyle, but, while his first-person style of tongue-tied adolescent-boy narrators gets a
little wearing, I did not get the sort of literary indigestion that frequently results from a gathering
of independent works between one set of covers. Partly this was because the books are short and
partly because the collection leads to a very pleasurable sense of evolution of events in a familiar
environment.
Highly recommended.
Although Mary Thomas lives and works in Winnipeg, MB, she has a summer cottage a mere
hundred miles from Ottawa and so is perhaps prejudiced in favour of stories of the area.
To comment on this title or this review, send mail to cm@umanitoba.ca.
Copyright © the Manitoba Library Association.
Reproduction for personal use is permitted only if this copyright notice
is maintained. Any other reproduction is prohibited without
permission.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR THIS ISSUE - October 20, 2000.
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