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Fiction Family Life

The Saint Elias

A Translation of Le Saint-Élias

by (author) Jacques Ferron

translated by Pierre Cloutier

Publisher
Les Presses de l'UniversitÈ d'Ottawa/University of Ottawa Press
Initial publish date
Apr 2024
Category
Family Life, Cultural Heritage, Small Town & Rural
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780776644431
    Publish Date
    Apr 2024
    List Price
    $14.95

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Description

Considered one of the most accomplished and engaging stories by the great writer Jacques Ferron, The Saint-Elias explores the real and the imaginary through the universal themes of life, death and love.
With the arrival of steamships, sailboats are gradually abandoned by sailors. It is in this context that the Cossette family comes by the Saint-Élias, a huge sailboat named after Elias Tourigny, the priest of Batiscan. From Marguerite, the mother, to Mithridate III, her grandson, they strive to restore her to her former nobility, with the aid of Armour Lupien, the young curate, and Doctor Fauteux. In this tale originally published in 1972, Jacques Ferron’s tender and poetic storytelling transports the reader into a world of fantasy poetic accents.

About the authors

Contributor Notes

Jacques Ferron (1921-1985), playwright, storyteller, novelist, physician and wit, is a winner of the Prix France-Québec, the Governor General's Award and other major literary prizes.
His father was a Liberal Party organizer, and Jacques Ferron (brother of Marcelle Ferron) was early attracted to political opposition. His earliest works, published in the late 1940s in Montréal newspapers and directed against the Duplessis regime, carried the profoundly humanist and socialist stamp that helped earn him a reputation as the Voltaire of Québec letters. His commitment to socialist principles, partly owing to his first wife's affiliation with the Communist Party, was expressed in his involvement with left-wing magazines (Situations, La Revue socialiste, Parti pris) and in his political campaign as a candidate for the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) in the 1958 federal election. He was later approached by the Rassemblement pour l'indépendance nationale and was a RIN candidate in the 1966 provincial election. Meanwhile, in 1963 he and friends founded the RHINOCEROS PARTY, which turned its main weapon - irony - on the increasingly dominant power of the federal government.
His plays and fiction are satirical expositions of predominant attitudes in Quebec. Wit and fantasy are his weapons. Time and space are transcended. Fellow novelist Victor-Lévy Beaulieu remarks that he has great admiration for Ferron, who, like his character Tinamer, is born of a lingering dream which he too has not yet left behind.

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