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Consolation

Michael Redhill

$19.99

Paperback

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English
Arrow
02 June 2008
A remarkable exploration of the power of place, home and memory, by the acclaimed author of Martin Sloane.

It is 1856, Toronto. Unable to make a living in the New World from his trade, English apothecary J.G. Hallam takes up the new science of photography, and embarks on a grand project to document the bleak young city. But returning from an exhibition of these images in England, Hallam's ship is lost in a violent storm on Lake Ontario - and the strongbox holding the photographs is lost.

A century and a half later, and the shoreline of the harbour has shifted dramatically. Professor David Hollis speculates that the sunken ship containing this important historical record lies in the landfill where the city's new Union Arena is to be built. But his findings are met only with howls of derision from his colleagues.

Three months later, Hollis is dead - and his grieving widow, Marianne, embarks on a furtive, unsettling quest to vindicate her husband. From her hotel room overlooking the excavation site where the arena is to stand, she watches and waits for a piece of the past to reappear that might alleviate the anguish of these civic and private vanishings...
By:  
Imprint:   Arrow
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 197mm,  Width: 129mm,  Spine: 28mm
Weight:   325g
ISBN:   9780099466253
ISBN 10:   0099466252
Pages:   480
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Poet, playwright and novelist Michael Redhill is the author of the acclaimed novel Martin Sloane, the short-story collection Fidelity, and poetry collections Asphodel and Light-Crossing . He is also publisher and co-editor of the literary magazine Brick. He lives and works in France.

Reviews for Consolation

The death of a prominent but scandalized scholar prompts a search for a photographic record of early Toronto in Redhill's second novel (Martin Sloane, 2002), in which narrative leaps between the 19th and 20th centuries.When David Hollis, wracked by Lou Gehrig's disease, committed suicide in the summer of 1997, he left behind a broken reputation. Shortly before dying, the forensic geologist authored a monograph claiming that a ship buried in the heart of downtown Toronto contained photographs of the entire city in the 1850s, but his refusal to show the diary he cited as evidence sparked accusations that he made up the whole thing. Hoping to rescue his honor, his grieving widow, Marianne, takes up residence in a hotel room overlooking the parcel of land where the photos are allegedly buried-and where a sports stadium is about to be built. High-strung and contentious, she regularly does battle with John, her daughter's fiance, the sole person who knows about her vigil. The book alternates between Marianne's story and that of Jem Hallam, a pharmacist who moves to Toronto from England in 1855; after Hallam's attempt to run an apothecary nearly bankrupts him (it turns out he purchased the shop from a man who accidentally caused three people to overdose), he becomes one of the city's earliest and most prolific photographers. The Hallam sections feature the novel's best-drawn characters, including Samuel Ennis, the entrepreneurial but ailing man who introduces Jem to the photo trade, and Claudia Rowe, a down-on-her-luck widow who becomes his assistant. Redhill's descriptions of early Toronto are warmly romantic while still capturing a hard-bitten frontier-times attitude. The modern-day portions of the book are weaker by comparison-Marianne and John are relatively undernourished characters who often behave in ways that drive the plot but feel unnatural, which makes the concluding revelations feel underwhelming. Not a failure-it's a worthy successor to Richard Powers's similarly time-shifting novel, Gain-but its seams occasionally show. (Kirkus Reviews)


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