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The Englishman's Boy (1996)

por Guy Vanderhaeghe

Series: The Frontier Trilogy (book 1)

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
7371830,745 (3.66)57
This brilliant and compelling novel, set in the early days of the Canadian West, is the first of three linked historical novels by Guy Vanderhaeghe, one of Canada's preeminent storytellers.""" "The Englishman's Boy""brilliantly connects Hollywood in the 1920s with one of the bloodiest, most brutal events of the nineteenth-century Canadian West -- the Cypress Hills Massacre. Vanderhaeghe's rendering of the stark, dramatic beauty of the western landscape and of Hollywood in its most extravagant era -- with its visionaries, celebrities, and dreamers -- provides vivid background for scenes of action, adventure, and intrigue. Richly textured, evocative of time and place, this is an unforgettable novel about power, greed, and the pull of dreams that has at its centre the haunting story of a young drifter -- "the Englishman's boy."… (más)
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» Ver también 57 menciones

Mostrando 1-5 de 18 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
It's the 1920s, and an eccentric Hollywood megalomaniac (Damon Chance) is determined to create an epic "great American film" about the American wild west. To this end, he hires Harry Vincent, a down-on-his-luck scenarist (the guy who writes the cards for silent movies), to interview Shorty McAdoo, a genuine wild west relic, to extract an "authentic" recounting of how Americans tamed the west.

The first thing that hits you is the quality of Vanderhaege's writing. It's lyric and original and swollen with authentic period detail - he doesn't just describe the Canadian/US frontier in detail: he challenges his readers to smell it, taste it, touch it, feel it, employing language that's stunning in its lack of anachronism.

The next thing you notice is Chance's objective isn't as straightforward as it first appears. Your first clue (assuming we overlook the fact that the guy's name is, literally, "Chance") is that this eccentric studio boss venerates D.W. Griffith's "Birth of a Nation" - a horrific example of self-aggrandizing mythmaking if there ever was one. Over the course of the novel, you come to realize that Chance isn't looking for authenticity - he's looking to galvanize American ruthlessness by propagating the message that America is besieged ("Besieged" being the literal name of the movie he is making) by enemies, especially Europe's revolutionaries and the Jews, who deserve to be destroyed. "The enemy is never human," he tells our scenarist, creating a confounding ethical dilemma for poor Vincent who is coming to realize, through his interactions with McAdoo and a comely Jewish colleague (Rachel) that in the real world - unlike black & white "shorties" he writes for - good and evil are, at best, ambiguous concepts.

This is a provocative novel of ideas cleverly embedded in a ripping yarn that embraces both the birth of Hollywood and the birth of our frontier, conveyed in vivid, affecting prose. Feel free to enjoy this for the terrific action/characters/ambiance, but for those who enjoy digging deeper, this novel offers ample opportunity to "invite argument, invite reconsideration, invite thought" - as Chance notes in one of his epic philosophical streams-of-consciousness. Is America's spiritual identity/native art form "motion," as Chance suggests? Should the goal of history-telling be to preserve the past (as Vincent supposes) or to secure the future (as Chance advocates)? Is empathy for the proletariat a strength (as Vincent believes) or a weakness (as Chance argues)? Is using movies to facilitate cultural assimilation appropriate - or dangerous propagandizing? So much great fodder here for book group discussion! ( )
  Dorritt | Aug 30, 2023 |
A haunting tale, cleverly mixing the early years of Hollywood with the earlier years of the Wild West. I enjoyed the portrayal of the conflicts between the director's politically-motivated 'vision' and the eyewitness's need for the 'truth' to be told. ( )
  AJBraithwaite | Aug 14, 2017 |
Guy Vanderhaeghe's novel, THE ENGLISHMAN'S BOY, has been around for twenty years, and has probably by now achieved the status of a Canadian classic. I enjoyed the hell out of it. On the one hand, it's an old-time sort of western, with one plot line following a group of ruthless wolf hunters in 1873 on the trail of a couple Indians who stole their horses (loosely based on actual historical events). On the other hand, a second plot line is an in-depth look at 1920s Hollywood, with a backdrop of stars like Chaplin, Keaton, Arbuckle, Fairbanks, Pickford, and countless others, as wells as the top cowboy stars of the era - Tom Mix, Hoot Gibson, William S. Hart, Tim McCoy and others. But these are only background, local color. The Hollywood narrator is a young writer named Harry Vincent, hired by a reclusive and eccentric studio mogul, Damon Ira Chance, to assist him in making the Great American Western Movie. To do this, Harry must track down an aging stunt man, Shorty McAdoo, whose dark and mysterious past is key to making Chance's film. The novel unfolds in alternating chapters, moving between the brutal events of the 1870s and 1920s Tinseltown, with all of its shiny surfaces and dark underside, until the two narratives gradually merge.

I could write a standard sort of review here, but instead I'm going to indulge my booklover's side, because the whole time I was reading this book, I kept remembering and making mental comparisons to a number of other books I have read over the past forty years or more, both fiction and non-fiction. Here they are, first a few older ones -

LITTLE BIG MAN, by Thomas Berger
BUTCHER'S CROSSING, by John Williams
TOM MIX DIED FOR YOUR SINS, by Darryl Ponicsan
OF MICE AND MEN, by John Steinbeck
THE SEARCHERS, by Alan Le May.

And then, a few more contemporary ones -

DOC and EPITAPH, by Mary Doria Russell
THE OUTLANDER, by Gil Adamson
FALLING FROM HORSES (and THE HEARTS OF HORSES), by Molly Gloss
HE WAS SOME KIND OF A MAN, by Roderick McGillis.

If I thought more about it, I could probably add to this list, but I've indulged myself enough, I think. I do love reading a good western now and then, and THE ENGLISHMAN'S BOY is a damn good one. In it, Damon Ira Chance dreamed of making the Great American Movie. I think author Guy Vanderhaeghe dreamed of writing the Great Canadian Western. He may well have succeeded.

But I may suspend judgement on that for the time being. Because, if I have any complaints about this book - and it's very minor - it's that it tends to 'lumber' just a bit here and there. But here's another factor. This is only book one in what became a trilogy. The other two books are A GOOD MAN and THE LAST CROSSING. And I hope to get around to them eventually. This one's plenty good though, and I will highly recommend it.

- Tim Bazzett, author of the memoir, BOOKLOVER ( )
  TimBazzett | Dec 18, 2016 |
(Literary Fiction, Canadian)

Amazon: “It’s a story within a story–a shimmering romance about the myth of movie-making in Hollywood in the 1920s and an account of a real-life massacre of First Nations people in Montana in the 1870s. Linking these two very different stories is Shorty McAdoo, an aging cowboy, who as a young man acted as a guide for the American and Canadian trappers who perpetrated the massacre, and who is now going to be the subject of a no-holds-barred blockbuster set to rival D.W. Griffith’s epic Birth of a Nation.” (My note: The massacre actually took place in Saskatchewan but was spearheaded by American wolf-hunters from Montana.)

Winner of the 1996 Governor General’s Award for Fiction (beating out Margaret Atwood’s Alias Grace), this is the first in a loose trilogy, although each book stands alone. Brilliant writing.

4 stars ( )
  ParadisePorch | Dec 5, 2016 |
“I’ve been knocking around this country ten years – it changes a man. But I’m not all the way there yet … I’m betwixt and between – half civilized, half uncivilized. A centaur.” (Ch 19)

Vanderhaeghe tells two stories, past and present, in alternating chapters in The Englishman’s Boy. In the past, the eponymous protagonist finds himself adrift in Fort Benton, Montana when his employer dies unexpectedly. He hooks up with a group of wolfers, hot in pursuit of the Assiniboine whom they believe to have stolen several of their horses. The wolfers are harsh, savage men, lusting for a fight with their enemies. The pursuit leads the pack north into Canada to the site of the 1873 Cypress Hills Massacre in Saskatchewan. The Englishman’s boy, himself a tough and hardened case, is not abjectly cruel. He is irreparably changed by his experience. In Vanderhaeghe’s signature plush description, we meet the “boy”:

“Dawe’s boy had the gaunt, cadaverous look of the rural poor, of the runt who has sucked the hint tit, who has been whupped with horse-halters and stove-wood, anything hard and hurting that came to hand. His anthracite eyes did his talking for him. They said: Expect no quarter. Give none. He owned a face white and cold as a well-digger’s ass. He didn’t string more than five words together at a time and no one could place his accent. He was seventeen but looked fifteen, stunted by a diet of bread and lard and strong tea. Everyone took him for a runaway from some hard-scrabble, heartbreak farm. Out West, his kind were thick as ticks on a dog.” (Ch 3)

Fast forward to 1920s Hollywood, and scenarist Harry Vincent is hired by plutocrat Damon Ira Chance of Best Chance Pictures to track down aged cowboy, Shorty McAdoo, the Englishman’s boy. Chance is looking to make the quintessential American Western, based on the “truth.” McAdoo has the reputation of an “Indian fighter,” and Chance wants his story. Writer Vincent has his work cut out for him: McAdoo is reclusive and cantankerous. Haunted by his past at Cypress Hills, he’s not in a mood to relive that history, particularly not to a Hollywood writer claiming to be in search of the “truth.” McAdoo is right, of course: Chance wants his “vision” of the truth, not the facts. So the greed and superficiality of early Hollywood meets the unrest of a bloodbath in the old West.

The Englishman’s Boy is the first of a loose trilogy by Vanderhaeghe, though having read all three novels, each is easily a stand alone read. While I did not enjoy The Englishman’s Boy as much as The Last Crossing and A Good Man, I’ve said before that I find Vanderhaeghe irresistibly readable, and that remains true here. Recommended! ( )
6 vota lit_chick | Feb 11, 2013 |
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This brilliant and compelling novel, set in the early days of the Canadian West, is the first of three linked historical novels by Guy Vanderhaeghe, one of Canada's preeminent storytellers.""" "The Englishman's Boy""brilliantly connects Hollywood in the 1920s with one of the bloodiest, most brutal events of the nineteenth-century Canadian West -- the Cypress Hills Massacre. Vanderhaeghe's rendering of the stark, dramatic beauty of the western landscape and of Hollywood in its most extravagant era -- with its visionaries, celebrities, and dreamers -- provides vivid background for scenes of action, adventure, and intrigue. Richly textured, evocative of time and place, this is an unforgettable novel about power, greed, and the pull of dreams that has at its centre the haunting story of a young drifter -- "the Englishman's boy."

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