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Last Resort: A Memoir [Paperback]

Linwood Barclay
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Feb 22 2001
In 1966, when his parents abandoned their suburban Toronto split-level to buy Green Acres, a cottage and trailer resort in Ontario’s Kawartha Lakes region, eleven-year-old Linwood Barclay’s life took an unexpected turn.

No more rec-room train sets. Now Linwood was hauling fish guts to the woods for burial, answering distress calls from women in the ladies’ room who found themselves without toilet paper, and standing in leaky chest-waders pounding dock posts into the lake bottom.

The chores weren’t so bad, especially when he could help his father, who had been a commercial artist before he bought his way into the tourist business. And in other ways, it was a good life for a boy. He had wheels (a John Deere riding mower), a small aluminum boat with a 9.5-horsepower outboard and only one speed (fast), and Chipper, a dog that chased boats the way other dogs chase cars, sometimes with catastrophically comic results. Linwood also had access to The Chart, a cottage reservations list that was, for him, a guide to the arrivals and departures of the guests’ teenaged daughters. Summer romances could be as intense as they were heartbreaking.

When he was sixteen, an unexpected tragedy changed Linwood’s life again. His older brother, Rett, helped out as best he could, but he was wrestling with demons of his own – often withdrawing into his own complicated inner world. Linwood found an extended family in the resort’s guests, who lent him a hand, and shaped him into the man he would become.

His mother’s eccentricities (she quit driving to shame the police for having given her a ticket) made Linwood’s new responsibilities heavier than they might otherwise have been. When he finally decided to move away from Green Acres to make a separate life, she made it as difficult as possible for him.

In the midst of all this, Linwood found his vocation, and mentors, too, in Margaret Laurence, and in Kenneth Millar, who (under the pen name Ross MacDonald) wrote a highly successful series of detective novels.

In this memoir, Linwood Barclay looks back with humour, sadness, and affection on the singular circumstances of his coming of age.

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In the mid-'60s, when Linwood Barclay was around 11, his father's once-thriving career in commercial art dried up as photography began to take over advertising. "Dad became the equivalent of a modern-day blacksmith," he remembers. His mother, always "looking for a way to embrace her love for trailers more intimately," suggested the idea of a tourist business as a fallback position: a trailer park or a place combining trailers and cottages. The search for a place began--and ended--at Green Acres, on Pigeon Lake in the Kawartha Lakes, Victoria County, Ontario: 10 acres, 400 feet of shoreline, cottages and spaces for about 20 trailers. Barclay's life was about to change forever.

Last Resort is the humorous and bittersweet retelling of Barclay's coming of age at Green Acres. It is the story of unforgettable childhood summers at the camp: the endless and passionate pursuit of girls; adventures with boats, with buddies, and with a half-crazed, boat-chasing, wave-biting mutt; classic fishing expeditions; the discovery that meaningful and lasting friendship is possible between a child and an adult. Yet for Barclay, the years at Green Acres would also become a moving object lesson in the art of growing up. Family crises and dysfunction abound. His combative mother gives up driving "on principle" after receiving a traffic ticket; a brother's life is circumscribed by his struggle with mental illness; and his father's failing health and early death catapults a 17-year-old Linwood into a world of adult concerns and responsibilities. Last Resort is memorable for its quirky mix of irreverent humour, nostalgia, and loss. Summers are special because they don't last, and Barclay's memoir is an easygoing yet affecting meditation on beginnings and endings--large and small. --Svenja Soldovieri --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

“A moving, bittersweet and naturally funny memoir of a young man’s coming of age under somewhat peculiar circumstances.”
London Free Press

“…manages to capture something elusive: the magical, almost ineffable wonder of childhood, where the sense of freedom offered by a nine-horsepower boat, a summer romance or the first serious conversation with an adult offers a promise of life which one rarely shakes off in later years.”
National Post

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Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful memoir Aug 4 2008
Format:Hardcover
This is a lovely, yet painful memoir of growing up in Ontario cottage country. Not only do we read of Linwood's coming of age while working at his family's seasonal campground, we also get a very honest view of what it is to live with a sibling who is mentally ill and a mother that is just not quite all there.

A beautiful book.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Hilarious, with a bite Feb 23 2004
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
Linwood Barclay, one of the funniest writers in Canada, has written a memoir of his youth that will have every reader saying, "Yeah, I always wondered who owned those holiday fishing camp things on Lake Wishamagog." The Barclays did.
But in this memoir, Barclay has done something much more ambitious than make the reader laugh with recognition on each page. He has what the humorist Joey Slinger calls "meatloaf memories", recalling the things that weren't so funny like a father's death and a mother's insane expectation that her son will remain in a parallel version of her world.
I used to think funny was the hardest writing to carry off, but funny and painful is actually worse. The Camp Wishamagogs I drive by on the highway now radiate powerful emotions at me as I pass.
If you're not into anguish, there's a lot of outhouse maintenance information in here for Red Green types.
A beautifully handled memoir.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Linwood, this one's for you Feb 23 2004
Format:Paperback
Barclay has finally revealed his long buried genius in this masterpiece. I've been reading the Toronto Star for years and never actually found anything he said very funny, but this book defied all my expectations with its brilliant gems of sparkling Linwoodisms. Now if I had actually read the book maybe you should listen to me. Really I'm just writing this so he stops complaining in print that nobody's reviewed him.
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