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The Town That Forgot How to Breathe
 
 

The Town That Forgot How to Breathe (Paperback)

de Kenneth J. Harvey (Author)
4.4étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (11 évaluations de client)
Prix éditeur: CDN$ 14.94
Price: CDN$ 12.40 & se qualifie pour Livraison super-économique GRATUITE pour des commandes de plus de CDN$ 39. Détails
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Habituellement expédié sous 3 à 5 semaines.
Vendu et expédié par Amazon.ca.

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  • Cet article : The Town That Forgot How to Breathe de Kenneth J. Harvey

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Descriptions du produit

Amazon.ca

With no more cod to fish, Bareneed, the setting of Kenneth J. Harvey's powerfully eerie The Town That Forgot How to Breathe, has become another Newfoundland outport village on the wane. As one character laments, "Bareneed, once a lively and warm place, now stank of drabness and heartbreak." It's not much of a magnet for tourists, but it has attracted two visitors for the summer: a fisheries officer and his young daughter. Deeply pained by the recent break-up of his marriage, Joseph fails to notice the more curious aspects of the town. It takes him a while to hear about the townsfolk who've been dropping dead for no apparent reason. He's also slow to realize that his daughter Robin's new playmate is the ghost of a drowned girl. When he and Robin find an "exceptionally ugly" sculpin at the end of their fishing line, Joseph again tries to stay calm. But then he takes a closer look at his catch. "Feeling his fingers turn warm while he tried to disengage the hook," Harvey writes, "Joseph whisked them away. Flesh-coloured fluid seeped from the sculpin's wide mouth. A solid object began edging out as he wiped his fingers on his pants--a flesh-coloured sculpted orb, topped with something that resembled hair, matted in mucousy clumps." The porcelain doll's head that emerges from the fish is one in a series of unsettling sights in Harvey's book. As more and more objects are expelled from the sea, Bareneed's most painful secrets come to the surface.

By setting his story in this desolate Atlantic locale, Harvey seeks to do more than add regional flavour to a Stephen King-style tale of an ordinary community plagued by inexplicable events. Instead, the terrors that Harvey describes are rooted in very real psychological and societal traumas. What makes The Town That Forgot How to Breathe so cunning is the way Harvey uses the horror genre as the basis for a provocative defence of Newfoundland's imperiled cultural traditions. Even though his ornate prose style can sometimes get waterlogged in the scenes between the shocks, Harvey has created a book that is as compelling as it is unique. --Jason Anderson --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.



Books in Canada

At the moment I feel as if I’ve just returned from the most incredible and exciting visit to Bareneed, Newfoundland and now must gather my wits so I can decide why much of Harvey’s latest novel seemed so real and so surreal at the same time!
Harvey, cleverly and thoughtfully introduces Miss Eileen Laracy early in his novel (you’ll hear more about her later), the character who eases us into Bareneed and the personalities of so many of its citizens.
Early in the tale we meet Joseph, divorced from Kim, and their daughter Robin. These three are meant to spend a three-week vacation in Bareneed to fish, meet Joseph’s Uncle Doug and enjoy the port town his father grew up in.
One feels immediately that there is a warm relationship between the author and his chosen setting. He expresses this through affectionate, humourous descriptions of his wonderful cast of characters and of the town and its environs.
But just as we begin to feel an affinity for the people of the town , they start coming down with a mysterious ailment. Lloyd Fowler, an otherwise decent man, imagines bludgeoning his wife to death. At the same time, he decides to stop breathing. To breathe suddenly seems to Lloyd like too much trouble. He dies, and in short order three more residents are stricken with the same illness. In each case the bizarre condition is accompanied by projections of violent emotions.
At the same time, sinister sea beasts, and long dead corpses begin appearing in the harbour. On the pier, an Albino Shark disgorges a man’s head which is so well preserved that it can be identified. In addition to these peculiar happenings the residents must deal with the spread of the breathing disorder. They are shocked when the Armed Forces arrive, bringing with them the predatory press. What do these developments presage?
Meanwhile, Joseph and his daughter are experiencing their own mystical and grotesque nightmares courtesy of their next-door neighbour, Claudia, and her deceased (yes deceased) daughter Jessica. This situation, made stranger by its sensual overtone is further complicated by the arrival of Joseph’s wife Kim.
Harvey, a true talent and superior storyteller, balances the frightening elements of his tale with the most enjoyable wit and humour. The local eccentrics beguile us with their tales of “a style of life abandoned,” happenings that would “dazzle yer wits” all in a dialect that borders on a foreign language. In the midst of this alarming, violent, fantastical setting, a milieu in which legends take on new life, Harvey has decided to show us what can happen to people when their identity and traditional way of life is threatened.
I’m grateful to the author for allowing his loveable Eileen Laracy to be the one to discover and explain to us the connection between the strange and fantastic events and the odd breathing sickness in Bareneed. I couldn’t imagine anyone refusing the opportunity to sit down with the toothless old Miss Laracy, listen to her tales of “da ghosts” and children being taken away by “da fairies” and “av’ a nice cup o’ tea ‘n a bit of dinner.”
Des McNally (Books in Canada)
--Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.

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The Town That Forgot How to Breathe
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The Town That Forgot How to Breathe 4.4étoiles sur 5 (11)
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11 évaluations
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4.4étoiles sur 5 (11 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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Commentaires client les plus utiles

 
5.0étoiles sur 5 KEPT ME BREATHLESS, Juil 12 2009
Par Bernie Koenig (London, Ontario Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Art Matters: The Art of Knowledge/The Knowledge of Art
Natural Law, Science, and the Social Construction of Reality

I recently discovered Ken Harvey and am trying to make up for lost time.
This book can be read in a number of ways, as other reviews show.
It is horror story, and old fashioned ghost story, a moral parable, a story about how technology is destroying what makes us human, a story about the revenge of nature, and a story about what it means to be one's self.

There are actually two stories going on that overlap. Doug Blackwood and his daughter Robin leave St John's for a holiday and go to a small fishing village on the coast. The village is depressed due to the closing of the Cod fishery and the processing plant.

When the troubles arise, which affect Robin, he calls his ex-wife Kim, who also comes to town. They all get caught up in the events.

There is a ghost girl in the house across from where Robert and Robin are staying. The ghost wants Robin as a permanent playmate, and, when Robin has real medical problems, they are, of course, complicated by the ghost issues.

Meanwhile, Tommy, who had been born stillborn but came to life but had brain damage draws pictures of things to come. And Old Miss Laracy keeps people grounded with her tales and ability to see spirits.

When all kinds of old drowned people appear it is Miss Laracy who can identify them. The dead people are all related to the people in the town who develop an inability to breathe. And with the loss of breathe comes a loss of identity.

People dig up old records and determine that something like this happened 70 years before, just when all kinds of electrical communications were being used.

In all a complex read that works on many levels, especially with regard to the identity of both the people and the places of the Newfoundland Outports.
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2.0étoiles sur 5 Unfulfilling Thriller, Juil 28 2008
Par Karl Shawfield (Vancouver, Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
This book is practically begging to be turned into an M Night Shyamalan movie. It starts out as a captivating and mysterious story, but as more and more stock characters are introduced and the action heats up, it seems like Harvey didn't really know how to wrap things up and we're left with a rather boring and nonsensical thriller, which then degenerates further into a polemic against electricity. The comparisons to Alistair McLeod are very misleading.
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1.0étoiles sur 5 The Town That Forgot How to Breathe, Aoû 28 2007
This is one of the worst books I've ever read. I kept reading to give it a chance and I did finish it. I've heard Harvey is such a good author and representative of the Newfoundland voice. Well, I find his writing repetitive and flat but not flat in a good and interesting way. I kept hoping it would get better. I really did. I understand that magic realism is at play in this novel and I enjoy a well written magic realism story but this isn't one. The plot was interesting but predictable and not fleshed out so that I kept feeling hammered over the head with the underlying theme of the book and the reason for the town "dying". And the title....oh couldn't someone have helped with the title?

I'll try some of his other books to give him another chance but I did not enjoy this one. Sorry.
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Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 Sometimes it takes the dead to show what life really is
What is a ghost, anyway? Why do they stay here and not just move on? What makes people even care one way or the other about their ancestors? Read more
Publié le Avril 6 2006 par Columbine Phoenix

5.0étoiles sur 5 Alienation and the Painful Loss of Family Connection
The Town That Forgot to Breathe is one of the most original and interesting novels that I have ever read. Read more
Publié le Aoû 21 2004 par Professor Donald Mitchell

5.0étoiles sur 5 The Town ... review
A book that you can't put down! Kenneth Harvey masterfully brings the delightful rural characters of Bareneed, Newfoundland to life and makes you feel that you are there sharing... Read more
Publié le Juil 7 2004 par Reviewer from Ottawa, Ontario,...

5.0étoiles sur 5 The Town That Forgot How To Breathe
"The people react against the invading culture or the loss of identity. A mass hypnosis kicks in, one that everybody believes because they have to, in order to survive... Read more
Publié le Jui 7 2004 par Brian Alger

5.0étoiles sur 5 Hold YOUR breathe ....
After reading only a few pages I knew I was in for a great read .. Joseph Blackwood and his eight year old daughter,Robin arrive in rural Newfoundland for a brief holiday only to... Read more
Publié le Jui 4 2004 par Meg Walter

5.0étoiles sur 5 Interesting!
Town That Forgot How To Breathe by talented Canadian writer Kenneth J. Harvey is an interesting book I had trouble putting down after I began reading it. Read more
Publié le Mai 28 2004 par V. T. Murray

5.0étoiles sur 5 The Town That Forgot How To Breathe
"The people react against the invading culture or the loss of identity. A mass hypnosis kicks in, one that everybody believes because they have to, in order to survive... Read more
Publié le Fév 9 2004 par Brian

5.0étoiles sur 5 what a whirlwind
This book swept me up and wouldn't let go.
Great descriptions of life in Newfoundland
and tons of characters. It's funny, scary,
poetic and full of suspense. Read more
Publié le Nov. 21 2003

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