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For other authors named Ray Smith, see the disambiguation page.

7+ Works 85 Members 3 Reviews

Works by Ray Smith

Associated Works

The Oxford Book of Canadian Short Stories in English (1986) — Contributor — 111 copies
Great Canadian Short Stories (1971) — Contributor — 53 copies
Ground Works: Avante-Garde for Thee (2002) — Contributor — 35 copies
Sixteen by twelve;: Short stories by Canadian writers (1970) — Contributor — 7 copies

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Gender
male
Nationality
Canada

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Reviews

A collection of stories mostly set in Atlantic Canada. The sense of place is very strong. At times the writing is wonderful. At other times it drags a little but well worth the effort.
 
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rosiezbanks | Dec 4, 2020 |
Good but quirky book, small town boy experiences the fantastic life of Montreal and it cast of unusual characters. There is a surprise ending, which I wont reveal.
½
 
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charlie68 | Sep 10, 2010 |
Century successfully navigates that tricky territory between the conventional and the inaccessible, demanding the reader’s full attention, and rewarding it, while retaining enough mystery to sustain, I expect, many readings. You continually detect movement in your peripheral vision, things you can’t quite spot, no matter how quickly you turn your head. When, halfway through a novel, you find yourself thinking that, man, you just gotta re-read this thing at least once, well, that’s a damn good book.

How to approach it? Century, in essence, explores familiar territory in an unfamiliar way. Yes, this is a Canadian novel: a multigenerational saga that follows the repeated tragedies of a single family, whose women keep kicking the bucket against the sweeping backdrop of history. Of a century, in fact. Oh, it’s not quite canonical Canlit; it lacks a prairie landscape, wendigoes, and snow – but these are mere quibbles. The story, if you like, is conventional.

The storytelling is anything but. The timeline moves back, rather than forward, so the story is necessarily discontinuous, more so because Smith obscures the relationships between the characters. Names are not often mentioned; it is easy to miss who is whose parent, who is whose doomed daughter. Smith follows the family tree back through the generations without leaving a map. Each chapter is a jump cut; one does not lead back to the next, and consequently, one feels that they are separate stories.

But they aren’t. Patterns of behaviour and the concerns of the characters repeat themselves back through the generations. The sins of the parents are visited on their children; the same personal failures play themselves out again and again, to the point that you want to re-read the book just to see how the last chapter may play out in the first, in ways that perhaps you initially failed to recognize. This is, then, a single, unified narrative, not a collection of stories; it simply refuses to play itself out in the way we expect.

Henry James said that the only obligation of a novel was to be interesting. This one is fascinating.

http://ajsomerset.wordpress.com/2010/03/09/our-murderous-century/
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ajsomerset | Mar 9, 2010 |

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Works
7
Also by
4
Members
85
Popularity
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Rating
3.8
Reviews
3
ISBNs
194
Languages
15

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