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Tay John (1939)

by Howard O'Hagan

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834325,412 (3.43)5
The awesome terrain of the Rocky Mountains is the setting for this extraordinary novel about a heroic man who boldly defies destiny. Tay John, a messianic halfbreed, is fated to lead his people to their Promised Land. In a rebellious act of will, he turns to the mountains to seek his own truths. This richly populated novel vividly depicts the exotic and rootless people who wound their way to the Canadian Northwest. It is a powerful modern legend that ranges over all aspects of the human heart and mind, incorporating passion and hatred, tragedy and triumph.… (more)
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Showing 4 of 4
This was a sometimes difficult book but thoroughly enjoyable in the end. I wanted to read this book partly because my mother grew up in Albreda, a tiny settlement 29 miles from the 'town' of Lucerne, a prominent place later in the book. There are several memorable scenes (spoiler alert here): a fight between Tay John and a grizzly; Tay John cutting off his own wrist to win a pinto horse; a priest dying from exposure in the high mountains; and the surprising ending. O'Hagan has a knack for physically describing his characters and something I wish other novelists would follow, on occasion reintroducing them. I sometimes found it difficult to follow the author when he was lyrical or philosophical, and the pace lagged at times. The last 50 pages captivated me, because I was anxious to see Tay John's fate, which would inevitably be tragic. Instead, it was rather mysterious and brought us full circle back to the beginning of the book. ( )
  wjburton | Mar 11, 2021 |
Very well written novel about a mysterious figure that appeared in the Canadian Rockies. ( )
  charlie68 | Oct 18, 2019 |
_Tay John_ is a woefully underappreciated book that deserves wider attention. Written by Howard O'Hagan, a true son of the Canadian west who was, by turns, a surveyer, a lawyer, and a wilderness guide in addition to being a writer, it stands as a great example of wilderness writing at its best. As the Canadian Encyclopedia says: "O'Hagan has been the quintessential 'mountain man' who knew the wilderness intimately and celebrated it through fiction."

In _Tay John_ we have a story in three parts. The first, Legend, starts out like a creation myth and tells the somewhat cryptic story of the birth and youth of the enigmatic Native half-breed known as Tay John (derived from the french "Tête Jaune" or "Yellowhead" on account of his unique blond hair). We see the circumstances of his birth and his early life among his people, his eventual restlessness, and the beginning of his life of wandering.

In the second part, Hearsay, we focus on the outdoorsman Jack Denham and his tall tales of the heroic Tay John, whose path he crosses several times in the wilderness. We begin to see the wider shape of the world of the Canadian Rockies at the end of the 19th century as the civilization of the white man encroaches upon the wilderness that heretofore held sway. Tay John begins to get entangled in this new world and is torn between the opportunities it offers and the ancient prophecies and expectations of his native tribe.

In the third and final section, Evidence - without a finding, the conflict between the old and new ways of the world comes to a head and Tay John is caught in the middle. The end of his tale proves to be as enigmatic as was its beginning and the reader is left to draw his own conclusions about its meaning.

The most outstanding element of O'Hagan's story is his descriptive prose. It's obvious that the man knew and loved the wilderness of which he writes and we see into the everday lives and concerns of the men who preferred to live their lives on the outskirts of society, able to plunge into the wilderness when it called to them. His characters are also a colourful bunch, running the gamut of pioneers, explorers, preachers and trappers who peopled the Canadian west. We move from wide panoramic scenes of the mountains and the forests to a close focus on the individual lives of people making their way in this wide world. All in all, I found _Tay John_ to be a compelling and moving story that portrayed its world and characters with vivid detail and wonder. ( )
  dulac3 | Apr 2, 2013 |
I bought this book because I like Canadian fiction, and because the author of Lullabies for Little Criminals, Heather O'Neill, recommended it.

Tay John is a "half-breed" (in the term of the times in which he lived)who his people believe is the legendary leader sent to lead them to the promised land. Tay John has other plans, and leaves his community. However, it seems that he cannot leave his destiny in the sense that he remains iconic whether as a god, or as a model for a cut-out figure to greet tourists at a Jasper resort.

The other characters in the story are equally exotic; they are the people who lived in Canada's northwest before World War I. The novel paints a vivid picture of a time, a geography and human spirit. ( )
  LynnB | Jul 15, 2007 |
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The time of this in its beginning, in men's time, is 1880 in the summer, and its place is the Athabaska valley, near its head in the mountains, and along the other waters falling into it, and beyond them a bit, over Yellowhead Pass to the westward, where the Fraser, rising in a lake, flows through wilderness and canyon down to the Pacific.
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The awesome terrain of the Rocky Mountains is the setting for this extraordinary novel about a heroic man who boldly defies destiny. Tay John, a messianic halfbreed, is fated to lead his people to their Promised Land. In a rebellious act of will, he turns to the mountains to seek his own truths. This richly populated novel vividly depicts the exotic and rootless people who wound their way to the Canadian Northwest. It is a powerful modern legend that ranges over all aspects of the human heart and mind, incorporating passion and hatred, tragedy and triumph.

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