Our December Guest : Maritime Christmas Stories
(2024)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Pottersfield Press, 2024
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781990770661 MWT17364757, 1990770665 17364757
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

In Our December Guest, Wayne Curtis once again draws on his own experiences to craft nineteen stories of autumn and winter life in rural New Brunswick in an age gone by. Authentic and true in every detail, his characters combine the strength and resilience required to eke out a living from the woods and the rivers as well as a sensitivity to the beauty of nature and an appreciation of the arts. Lacking town culture, Curtis's men and women make their own entertainment after a long day's work. The music they render may not be polished, but it is heartfelt, as is every aspect of their activities, either of work or play. Their lives are hard, and the parents and grandparents in these stories have often lived their entire lives in one place, working past the age when those in urban centres would have retired. Yet despite the bone-wearying efforts they must make every day to keep their farms running, Curtis's characters have a deep appreciation for both the bounty their natural world provides and the harshness it visits upon them. In his elegant and precise prose, Curtis moves and entertains readers with stories about a variety of memorable characters: a boy who orders a coveted belt buckle from a mail-order catalogue, only to be disappointed with the results of this accessory; a young woman who, having had to do woods work to help her family, is given both advice and practical help by an elderly aunt after a family sleigh ride; a young boy who goes on his first visit to the woods with his ageing grandfather; a man who hungers for the love of a certain woman, only to be faced with her indifference; a family visited by a tramp who bestows upon the boy a special gift from Santa. In each of these tales, Wayne Curtis captures a way of life that he both lived and remembers, and each story shimmers with both his love of that life and his understanding of the emotions it evokes. In Our December Guest, Wayne Curtis once again draws on his own experiences to craft nineteen stories of autumn and winter life in rural New Brunswick in an age gone by. Authentic and true in every detail, his characters combine the strength and resilience required to eke out a living from the woods and the rivers as well as a sensitivity to the beauty of nature and an appreciation of the arts. In Our December Guest, Wayne Curtis once again draws on his own experiences to craft nineteen stories of autumn and winter life in rural New Brunswick in an age gone by. Authentic and true in every detail, his characters combine the strength and resilience required to eke out a living from the woods and the rivers as well as a sensitivity to the beauty of nature and an appreciation of the arts. Lacking town culture, Curtis's men and women make their own entertainment after a long day's work. The music they render may not be polished, but it is heartfelt, as is every aspect of their activities, either of work or play. Their lives are hard, and the parents and grandparents in these stories have often lived their entire lives in one place, working past the age when those in urban centres would have retired. Yet despite the bone-wearying efforts they must make every day to keep their farms running, Curtis's characters have a deep appreciation for both the bounty their natural world provides and the harshness it visits upon them. In his elegant and precise prose, Curtis moves and entertains readers with stories about a variety of memorable characters: a boy who orders a coveted belt buckle from a mail-order catalogue, only to be disappointed with the results of this accessory; a young woman who, having had to do woods work to help her family, is given both advice and practical help by an elderly aunt after a family sleigh ride; a young boy who goes on his first visit to the woods with his ageing grandfather; a man who hungers for the love of a certain woman, only to be fac

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