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The second novel in the highly acclaimed series Charles the Bold, about a young man growing up in east-end Montreal. "Montreal! You're going to be hearing from me! I'm going to make your ears ring!" These are the last words in this hypnotically interesting saga that follow the adventurous life of our bold hero, Charles Thibodeau. This book takes us through his high school years, and is called The Years of Fire for three reasons. First, he discovers girls, and we follow his fumbling but show more enthusiastic adventures with them. Second, he becomes fired up about politics ("Every so often he would raise his right hand and stare at it in amazement. Just think, it has just shaken the hand of Ren#65533; L#65533;vesque!") and the first Quebec referendum plays a major role in this book. Above all, fire changes his life when his estranged father threatens his stepfather's store with arson, and Charles gets involved in dealing drugs to pay him off. How he escapes from his contacts with the pool-hall underworld, with the help of his friends, and emerges as an ambitious young writer makes for involving and fascinating reading, provided by a superb storyteller. From the Hardcover edition. show lessTags
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22 Works 511 Members
Yves Beauchemin is a French-Canadian novelist whose work, which is full of both robust comedy and political themes, has been compared to that of Dickens and Balzac. Beauchemin was born in 1941 in Noranda, Quebec, Canada. An avid reader as a teenager, he devoured Balzac, Steinbeck, Dickens, Chekhov, Tolstoy, Turgenev, and other authors who inspired show more him to try his hand at fiction. Later he attended the College Universitaire Garneau in Quebec, where he taught foreign literature from 1965 to 1966. In 1969 he became a researcher for Radio-Quebec in Montreal, a position he retained while embarking on his career in literature. Beauchemin's first novel, L'Enfirouape (The Sucker, 1974), which was based on a 1970 political kidnapping in Quebec, won him the Prix France-Quebec. He then spent several years working on Le Matou, which was published in French in 1981 and in English as The Alley Cat in 1986. A combination of political allegory and black comedy, it won acclaim in both Canada and the United States. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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- Canonical title
- The Years of Fire
- Original title
- Un saut dans le vide
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- Members
- 40
- Popularity
- 729,032
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- (3.50)
- Languages
- English, French
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 7
- ASINs
- 3

























































