jawnbc: (maggie au canada)
[personal profile] jawnbc
I had the pleasure of re-reading a favourite book this week: Wayne Johnston’s The Colony of Unrequited Dreams. A book that wholly stood up to a second reading. Johnston has crafted a engaging historical novel, for which no awarenes or understanding of the history in question in required--though the book works on a whole other level for those knoweldgeable about Newfoundland.

For Canadians and canadophiles, the notion of a lifelong romantic entanglement between Joey Smallwood and (the fictious) Sheilagh Fielding having a formative role in Newfoundland (and therefore Canadian) history seems perhaps farcical. Until you read the book. Colony is, first and foremost, a great story told by a great storyteller. But like any historical fiction of note, Johnston embeds both facts into his narrative and infuses the narrative elements so convincingly one wonders if perhaps there really was a Fielding. And though the bulk of the book is written from Smallwood’s perspective, the journals, press clippings (she was a journalist), and private correpsondence of Fielding brings in new aspects of the story ... and an element of mystery.

It’s a gripping, entertaining, moving novel. Johnston’s subsequent work, The Navigator of New York is quite good, but not quite this good. This is the book for which Johnston will be remembered.
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