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Loading... The Cashierby Gabrielle Roy
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. "Alexandre Chenevert is a Montreal cashier, trapped by his narrow environment and acutely aware of his loneliness. Gabrielle Roy has created a memorable and poignant picture of an ordinary man and his attempts to transcend his circumstances and his fate." - jacket notes from the McClelland and Stewart edition. Translated by Harry Binsse, with an introduction by W.C. Lougheed. A classic French-Canadian novel. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to Publisher SeriesNew Canadian Library (40)
In Alexandre Chenevert, the Montreal bank teller trapped by his narrow environment and acutely aware of his loneliness, Gabrielle Roy has created a vivid and poignant portrait of an ordinary man and his attempts to transcend his circumstances and his fate. Set in 1947 amid the crumbled dreams of the post-War world, and drawing on modern themes of personal alienation and of the restorative force of nature, The Cashier is a tour de force of characterization and empathy by a literary virtuoso. No library descriptions found. |
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The Church, which in Quebec was almost always the Roman Catholic Church, exerted enormous influence and control, especially over the poor and working class. There was an ever-present need to conform to society's expectations of a proper marriage, to be an obedient and slavish worker, and to lead a righteous and proper life.
This is against human nature. So much of human nature must be stifled and repressed. But this happens with widely varying degrees of success. Monsieur Chenevert, a lowly bank teller, just wanted to do right, to be a righteous person, but he is a pinched, crabbed, irritable little man. Life didn't balance out on the books the way he thought it should. He is exasperating to everyone around him, and even to himself. And yet as Gabrielle Roy fleshes out his complexities, the reader becomes sympathetic to this man who has struggled so long with the only chance at life he gets.
One of the favourite characters of CanLit, the Great Canadian Outdoors, makes an appearance to justify its role as a restorative.
Roy's writing provides graceful and profound insights into the human condition, frequently leavened with flashes of humour.
Poor Monsieur Chenevert.
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