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A Number of Things
A Number of Things: Stories About Canada Told Through 50 Objects | Jane Urquhart
12 posts | 4 read | 6 to read
From one of our nations most beloved and iconic authors comes a lyrical 150th birthday gift to Canada. Jane Urquhart chooses 50 Canadian objects and weaves a rich and surprising narrative that speaks to our collective experience as a nation. Each object is beautifully illustrated by the noted artist Scott McKowen, with Jane Urquhart conjuring and distilling meaning and magic from these unexpected facets of our history. The fifty artifacts range from a Nobel Peace Prize medal, a literary cherry tree, a royal cowcatcher, a Beothuk legging, a famous skull and an iconic artists shoe, as well as an Innu tea doll, a Sikh RCMP turban, a Cree basket, a Massey-Harris tractor and a hanging rope, among an array of unexpected and intriguing objects. Bringing the curiosity of the novelist and the eloquence of the poet to her task, Jane Urquhart composes a symphonic memory bank with objects that resonate with symbolic significance. In this compelling portrait of a completely original country called Canada, a master novelist has given all of us a national birthday bouquet like no other.
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Augustdana
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I could not put this book down! She chose 50 objects to try and capture what it means to be Canadian for Canada 150! The illustrations are amazing

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Lindy
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In 1992, a two-year moratorium was announced on cod fishing in Canada. It instantly put 30,000 people out of work, the largest layoff in Canadian history. The moratorium has not yet been lifted.

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Lindy
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Catherine's great-great-granddaughter still looks at this sampler every day, and thinks about the hard life that awaited its creator. Like her mother, she has lived for most of her life in Huron County. Her name is Alice Munro...

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Lindy
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The town of St Paul Alberta celebrated Canada's centennial by building a UFO landing pad, which is exactly the sort of "oddly shaped poured-concrete architecture" that Urquhart calls memorable of 1967, along with "train whistles shrieking the first 4 notes of 'O Canada,' hippies dressed in the Canadian flag" and "geometric maple leaves."

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Lindy
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"a whole generation of young men, mostly from the Maritime Provinces, where after the collapse of the fisheries unemployment rates were high, have been displaced in order to work as labourers for Suncor or Syncrude." They "drive gigantic trucks the size of a 3-storey house" on "massive tires that cost over $50,000 each."

Lindy Urquhart (or her editors) have erred in the chapter titled Machines, however. Fort McMurray and the bitumen sands are in northeastern, not northwestern, Alberta. 7y
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Lindy
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By the 19th century, the Arctic had become an imperial obsession as explorers who set out in ships with names such as the Terror, the Fury, or the Griper (the modern-day equivalent would be the Schizoid, the Psychotic, or the Neurotic) were either frozen in or frozen out, in what appeared to be a difficult and time-consuming variety of male suicide.

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Lindy
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Danceland dance hall at Manitou Beach, Saskatchewan, has a maple "floating floor" fitted "overtop of twenty tons of tightly packed horsetail hair" and apparently causes "couples to levitate in each other's arms."

[Image detail from a painting by Prairie artist David Thauberger.]

TheKidUpstairs I'm loving these posts! Definitely adding this book to my TBR. 🍁 7y
Lindy @TheKidUpstairs I was expecting 50 museum objects. What Urquhart has done is so much better than that. 7y
andrew61 My daughter spent her 2nd year of uni last year in Toronto - i will keep an eye out for when it comes out in uk lindy as it looks like it would be a nice present. 7y
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Lindy @andrew61 It's such a Canadian-specific item (published to coincide with the 150th anniversary of confederation) that I wonder if it will be published in other countries. It would make a nice gift. Urquhart is an accomplished author. 7y
Spiderfelt It looks like a fascinating book. 7y
Lindy @Spiderfelt Indeed, it is. 7y
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Lindy
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Shortly before being hung for treason in 1885, Louis Riel said: "I am more convinced every day without a single exception I did right. And I have always believed that, as I have acted honestly, the time will come when the people of Canada will see and acknowledge it."
In 2016 the Supreme Court ruled that Métis and non-status Indians are "Indians" under the Constitution, bringing to attention exactly what Riel claimed: that rights were not upheld.

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Lindy
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Watteau's 1783 brush drawing 'The Death of Montcalm' uses the uniforms of the day. But when it came to setting, the French artist seemingly could not bring himself to leave out the standard Middle Eastern tent and palm tree, and these anomalies make the composition more than a little geographically confusing.
[My sister is in the photo, having just picked berries on the Plains of Abraham.]

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Ehbooklover
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An interesting and very unique book about Canada in honour of its sesquicentennial. Each chapter focuses on an object that the author has selected as being important to the story of the country. The writing and the accompanying illustrations are beautiful. I loved that she stayed away from the obvious (beavers, maple leaves, etc.) and dug a little deeper.

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Bookwhisperer17
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Read this end of dec2016

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RegularlyReads
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Lest we forget 🇨🇦