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Creation by Katherine Govier
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Creation (original 2002; edition 2003)

by Katherine Govier

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714153,295 (3.68)13
Member:kiwidoc
Title:Creation
Authors:Katherine Govier
Info:Overlook Hardcover (2003), Hardcover, 320 pages
Collections:Your library
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Tags:Fiction. Canadian.

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Creation by Katherine Govier (2002)

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I really enjoyed this novel with the careful descriptions of the internal terrain of the artist J.J. Audubon, and can almost see him peering over his painting in the half-lit cabin of a shipful of men he has not chosen to journey with. It's also an eye-opening book into the natural world, not only birds but sea and flora.
It was a little bit slow at times, but I think it's a complementary pace to the main character, who processes much and observes even more. ( )
  salerie | Jan 29, 2013 |
The point of departure for this biographical/historical novel is the curious omission among John James Audubon’s personal papers of any documents written during his 1833 expedition to Labrador. The novelist fills this absence in the historical record with imagined motives, desires, and actions that Audubon pursued during his 1833 expedition—an expedition on which he met British Naval Marine Surveyor, Henry Wolsey Bayfield. The novelist draws comparisons between the two men’s lives and work (charting the eastern shoreline of Canada and illustrating the birds of North America), while exploring philosophical themes characteristic of the early 19th century Western quests to describe, record, compile, and claim dominion over the vast world. Although not a central theme, a noteworthy element of the novel is that it depicts production of the famous Birds of America not as the efforts of a lone artist, but rather as an effort involving upwards of thirty workers—an early instance of assembly-line-art production, perhaps. Intertwined with the narrative of Audubon’s and Bayfield’s respective quests are personal revelations about Audubon’s marriage, his domineering relationship over his sons, his romantic friendship with Maria Martin (who later became mother-in-law to his sons and grandmother to his grandchildren), and the scandalous circumstances surrounding his birth and upbringing. ( )
  SheWoreRedShoes | Feb 21, 2010 |
An interesting look at one of the voyages of James Audubon up the coast of Labrador, while he was working on his Birds of North America. An insiteful look at the workings of his mind and his foretelling of the extinction of species.
  alioop | Aug 23, 2007 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0786259264, Hardcover)

Running two steps ahead of the bailiff, alternately praised and reviled, John James Audubon set himself the audacious task of drawing, from nature, every bird in North America. The result was his masterpiece, The Birds of America. In June 1833, partway through his mission, he enlisted his son, Captain Bayfield of the Royal Navy, and a party of young gentlemen to set sail for nesting grounds no ornithologist had ever seen, in the treacherous passage between Newfoundland and Labrador. Creation explores the short, stormy summer throughout which the captain became the artist's foil, measuring stick, and the recipient of his long-held secrets. It is an exploration of that fateful expedition, a probing and imaginative narrative that fills in a gap in the visionary naturalist's well-documented life.

In this atmospheric and enthralling novel, Katherine Govier tells the story of a man torn between the lies he has lived by and the truth he now needs. Her novel recreates the summer in which the world's greatest living bird artist finally understood the paradox embedded in his art: that the act of creation is also an act of destruction.

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 19 Apr 2011 02:33:47 -0400)

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