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I'll Tell You a Secret: A Memory of Seven Summers [Hardcover]

Anne Coleman
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

Sep 7 2004
“Memory opens for me through my body. I slip back because I catch a smell, hear a sound, or hold an evocative flavour on my tongue. But these single-sense glimpses of or gusts from the past are often fleeting. More compelling for me, more total, is when my whole body, the entire surface of my skin, and my muscles’ movements connect me to my old self. Especially it is the movements of summer, when more of me meets the elements, while I am swimming, or feeling my bramble-scratched legs against hot rocks. Or when I am experiencing the lovely lassitude that fills me at the end of a long afternoon of sun and water as I stand slicing tomatoes for my supper, while corn boils, and sun falls in the window on a pile of raspberries in a bowl. All my senses, all, are alive.” – from I’ll Tell You a Secret

A delightful, beautifully written and thoroughly engaging story of coming-of-age in the 1950s that focuses on Anne Coleman between the ages of fourteen and twenty-one, and her relationship with “Mr. MacLennan” (Canadian literary figure Hugh MacLennan), which played out in the summers in the village of North Hatley, Quebec, a picturesque resort that has been known to attract artists and writers and the upper-classes. In prose that is intimate, visual, and resonant with immediacy, Anne Coleman brings us back to summers in the 1950s, revealing the eccentricities of North Hatley and its residents, but most of all focusing on her special friendship with a man many years her senior.

Independent, individualistic, sensually alert, as a young girl Anne Coleman did not fit the mould. Later, when Anne is eighteen, she leads a double life, one which follows the course of a romance with Frank, the dark, brooding European young man who has a strange hold over her, and the enigmatic Mr. MacLennan, whose own feelings for Anne suggest themselves to her in ways that are at once confusing, tantalizing, and deeply important.

Along the way, the story also offers a wonderfully evocative portrayal of the 1950s, its sexual repressiveness and mores. The beautiful village of North Hatley comes alive in vivid ways.

This is a unique coming-of-age story by a writer who writes sentences that cut to the bone.

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From Amazon

The premise behind Anne Coleman's elegantly crafted autobiographical book, I'll Tell You a Secret, is captivating. In 2002 while attempting to write her memoirs, Coleman found herself preoccupied with one specific chapter from her youth: a unique friendship with the older Canadian author Hugh MacLennan (Two Solitudes, Barometer Rising), forged over several summers at the Coleman family cottage in North Hatley, Quebec. Drawn by the pull that relationship continued to have on her psyche more than 45 years after it had transpired and more than a decade after MacLennan's death, Coleman recast her efforts and, two months later, emerged with I'll Tell You a Secret. "As I recreated him, Mr. MacLennan stepped forth, stood before me, spoke," Coleman writes in her afterword. "And I inhabited my own young self. What I have written I suppose is 'creative non-fiction.' I have taken liberties ... but it has to be subjective. It is my truth I am after and, insofar as I can understand it, the truth about him."

I'll Tell You a Secret thus chronicles Coleman's relationship with MacLennan while loosely documenting other events in her coming-of-age: school, family, and eventually, marriage and children. Coleman's style is sumptuous and her descriptions of herself and her surroundings are full of exquisite, almost palpable, detail. But it's a build-up without a payoff. Coleman and MacLennan's friendship never develops beyond mild flirtation and ends abruptly and rather inexplicably when she marries. Coleman's failed marriage to Frank, an abusive, self-absorbed European transplant, meanwhile, has all the makings of major drama but is never commented upon following their wedding. All Coleman offers is this: "I had fled from my husband, and in my new freedom, I was restless with and had no time for the grimness that surrounded Mr. MacLennan, or for the sadness that had brought him to that place." As readers at the 225-page mark, we absolutely thirst for more detail than that, and all the lovely, sun-dappled trees in Quebec can't quite compensate. --Kim Hughes

Review

“A stunning portrait of a time and a half-evolved friendship. A classic, I think.”
—Michael Ondaatje, Globe and Mail

“Tantalizing, fascinating and lovingly crafted.”
London Free Press

“Written with the immediacy of the present and the wisdom of the intervening decades, this book is a perceptive meditation on the thrall of infatuation.”
—Sandra Martin, Globe and Mail

“The truth conveyed in the book is emotional, subjective, and one-sided, echoing Alice Munro’s stories of girlhood in their narrowness of location and point of view, as well as their concern with what is unspoken and unrealized.”
Quill & Quire --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Retrospective Page Turner Nov 21 2007
Format:Hardcover
I read this book when it first came out a couple of years ago and I still think of it often and will most likely re-read it several times in my lifetime. If you enjoy a book that allows you to feel connected to a character on several levels, a coming of age story that makes you feel as though you the reader are right there seeing, smelling, hearing tasting, and touching then give this book a try.
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