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Walking in ParadiseLibby CreelmanNewfoundland writer Libby Creelman finds the emotional heart of her characters
- characters continually seeking, and breaking, connections with others,
though they rarely know it. A girl welcomes cruelty into her life in an
attempt to get closer to a father living with chronic pain. A woman obsessed
with her lineage draws her family into inheriting more than they
bargained for. A young boy, burdened by the adults
with whom he keeps company, arrives at the end of a brief sailing trip
directing their futures as well as his own. A woman returns home to spend
a weekend with old high school friends and at last understands something
about her mother that had been trailing her for years.
Suddenly her voice turns soft, almost tender. `But you know
what you used to say at bedtime, don't you? You used to hold my face in
your hands, and say, "You're the best mommy in the universe."'...
She wants us to savour the image of me holding her face, cherishing her,
reading her mind.
These are stories about dislocation and about home - about leaving it,
returning to it, needing it, rejecting it - crafted in a style that is
controlled, yet sympathetic.
`These are stories about family, where love is at once most expected and most guarded. Libby Creelman's narrative touch, which is deceptively casual, is laced with small, true moments and brief true gestures, which are to be trusted.' - Bonnie Burnard `There must be some crystal in Libby Creelman's inner eye to see what she sees of the strange currents that spark between her sophisticated, brittle adults and sharp, bewildered children. Her craft is crystal anyway. I already treasure this book.' - Stan Dragland `Walking in Paradise is Libby Creelman's first book. The collection's fourteen stories, each between ten and fifteen pages in length, are carefully polished and almost uniformly effective. Creelman's style is spare and direct. The sentences are short and crisp, and an emphasis is placed on clear concrete imagery. The stories often unfold through dialogue and Creelman's ear is unerring as each of the characters is granted a distinctive voice.' - David Creelman, The Fiddlehead. Walking in Paradise was shortlisted for the first annual Winterset Award for `excellence in Newfoundland writing' administered by The Newfoundland and Labrador Arts Council. This prize was established to commemorate the memory of the St John's-born social historian and prize-winning author Sandra Fraser Gwyn who did so much to promote an awareness of the arts of Newfoundland across the country. The award is named after the house, on Winter Avenue in St John's, where Sandra grew up and lived until the age of eleven when her parents moved to the mainland. Soon afterwards, the house, one of the oldest residential properties in the city, was demolished. |
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Originally from Massachusetts, Libby Creelman now lives in St. John's, Newfoundland. Her short stories have been published in literary magazines across the country and have been selected for 99: Best Canadian Stories and The Journey Prize Anthology, numbers 10 and 11. She is a four-time winner in the Fictional Prose category for the Newfoundland and Labrador Arts & Letters Competition. |
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Search by Title Contents © 2008 The Porcupine's Quill, Inc. - Updated: 18 April 2008 by Tim Inkster The Porcupine's Quill would like to acknowledge the support of the Ontario Arts Council The Porcupine's Quill is remarkable in Canadian publishing in that most of the physical production We print on a twenty-five inch Heidelberg KORD, typically onto acid-free Zephyr Antique laid. To take a virtual tour of the pressroom, visit us at YouTube for a discussion of offset printing Other videos include Four Colour Printing, Smyth Sewing and Wood Engraving.
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and the Canada Council for the Arts for our publishing program. The financial support
of the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP)
is also gratefully acknowledged. Thanks, also, to the Government of Ontario
through the Ontario Media Development Corporation's Ontario Book Publisher's Tax Credit
(OBPTC) programme and the Ontario Book Initiative.
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The sheets are then folded, and sewn into signatures on a 1907 model Smyth National Book Sewing machine.
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