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That Summer in Paris

Page 26

by Callaghan, Morley;


  STRANGE FUGITIVE (No. 19) ~ MORLEY CALLAGHAN

  Novel 5.5x8.5 242 pages ISBN: 978-1-55096-155-3 (tpb)

  Callaghan’s first novel – originally published in New York in 1928 – announced the coming of the urban novel in Canada, and we can now see it as a proto-type for the “gangster” novel in America. The story is set in Toronto in the era of the speakeasy and underworld vendettas.

  IT’S NEVER OVER (No. 20) ~ MORLEY CALLAGHAN

  Novel 5.5x8.5 190 pages ISBN: 978-1-55096-157-7 (tpb)

  1930 was an electrifying time for writing. Callaghan’s second novel, completed while he was living in Paris – imbibing and boxing with Joyce and Hemingway (see his memoir, Classics No. 1, That Summer in Paris) – has violence at its core; but first and foremost it is a story of love, a love haunted by a hanging. Dostoyevskian in its depiction of the morbid progress of possession moving like a virus, the novel is sustained insight of a very high order.

  AFTER EXILE (No. 21) ~ RAYMOND KNISTER

  Poetry 5.5x8.5 240 pages ISBN: 978-1-55096-159-1 (tpb)

  This book collects for the first time Knister’s poetry. The title After Exile is plucked from Knister’s long poem written after he returned from Chicago and decided to become the unthinkable: a modernist Canadian writer. Knister, writing in the 20s and 30s, could barely get his poems published in Canada, but magazines like This Quarter (Paris), Poetry (Chicago) Voices (Boston), and The Dial (New York City), eagerly printed what he sent, and always asked for more and all of it is in this book.

  THE COMPLETE STORIES OF MORLEY CALLAGHAN (No. 22-25)

  Four Volumes ~ Stories 5.5 x 8.5 (tpb) (tpb)

  v1 ISBN: 978-1-55096-304-5 352 Pages

  v2 ISBN: 978-1-55096-305-2 344 Pages

  v3 ISBN: 978-1-55096-306-9 360 Pages

  v4 ISBN: 978-1-55096-307-6 360 Pages

  The complete short fiction of Morley Callaghan is brought together as he comes into full recognition as one of the singular storytellers of our time. “Attractively produced in four volumes, each introduced by [Alistair Macleod, André Alexis, Anne Michaels and Margaret Atwood], and each containing ‘Editor’s Endnotes.’ The project is nothing if not ambitious... [and provides for] the definitive edition.” —Books in Canada

  So that the reader may appreciate this writer’s development and the shape of his career – and for those with a scholarly approach to the reading of these collections – each book contains an on-end section providing the year of publication for each story, a Q&A section related to each volume’s stories, and comprehensive editorial notes. Also included are historical photographs, manuscript pages, and more.

  CONTRASTS: IN THE WARD ~ A BOOK OF POETRY AND PAINTINGS (No. 26) ~ LAWREN HARRIS

  Poetry/16 Colour Paintings 7x7 168 pages ISBN: 978-1-55096-308-3 (special edition pb)

  Group of Seven painter Lawren Harris’ poetry and paintings take the reader on a unique historical journey that offers a glimpse of our country’s past as it was during early urbanization. “This small album of poetry, paintings, and biographical walking tour ought to be on every ‘Welcome to Toronto’ (and ‘Canada’) book list. Gregory Betts’s smart, illustrative writing, which convinces by style as well as content, and Exile Editions’ winning presentation, combine to make Lawren Harris: In the Ward a fresh look at the early work of one of Canada’s most iconic modernists.” — Open Book Toronto

  WE WASN’T PALS ~ CANADIAN POETRY AND PROSE OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR (No. 27) ~ ED. BRUCE MEYER AND BARRY CALLAGHAN

  Poetry/Prose 5.5x8.5 320 pages ISBN: 978-1-55096-315-1 (tpb)

  2014 marks the 100th anniversary of the start of the war...

  For decades the literature of Canada’s experience in World War One lay ignored and was dismissed by readers, critics, and literary historians. Here, at last, is the imaginative testimony of those who served in the trenches and hospitals of the Great War. These pages chronicle the struggle to put into words the horrors, the insights, and the tribulations that ultimately shaped a nation’s character. In the voices of Frank Prewett, W. Redvers Dent, nurse Bertha Carveth, fighter pilot Hartley Munro Thomas, and other members of a generation that gave their lives and their souls to the war, this is the first anthology since 1918 of poetry, fiction, essays, songs, and illustrations that adds an important new chapter to Canada’s literature. Preface and Introduction by Bruce Meyer; Foreword by Barry Callaghan; Afterword by Margaret Atwood.

  The Exile Classics, and Exile Related Reading titles, are available for purchase at: www.ExileEditions.com

  Table of Contents

  COVER CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  CHAPTER 12

  CHAPTER 13

  CHAPTER 14

  CHAPTER 15

  CHAPTER 16

  CHAPTER 17

  CHAPTER 18

  CHAPTER 19

  CHAPTER 20

  CHAPTER 21

  CHAPTER 22

  CHAPTER 23

  CHAPTER 24

  CHAPTER 25

  CHAPTER 26

  CHAPTER 27

  CHAPTER 28

  A Literary Life

  INTRODUCING ERNEST HEMINGWAY

  JOYCE: INTO THE DREAMWORLD

  IN A JUGULAR VEIN: HEMINGWAY

  SCOTT FITZGERALD

  ON BEING GENIUSES TOGETHER

  COLLEGE OF ONE: FITZGERALD

  PARIS REVISITED

  Questions for Discussion Related Reading

  Related Reading from Exile Editions

  Guide

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  Contents

 

 

 


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