Of this earth : a Mennonite boyhood in the boreal forest / Rudy Wiebe

By: Wiebe, Rudy Henry, 1934-Material type: TextTextPublisher: Toronto : Alfred A. Knopf Canada, c2006Edition: 1st edDescription: ix, 391 p. : ill., maps, ports. ; 22 cmISBN: 0676977529; 9780676977523 (hbk.)Subject(s): Wiebe, Rudy Henry, 1934- -- Childhood and youth | Wiebe, Rudy, 1934- -- Enfance et jeuness | Mennonites -- Saskatchewan -- Speedwell -- Biography | Farm life -- Saskatchewan -- Speedwell | Authors, Canadian -- 20th century -- Biography | Mennonites -- Saskatchewan -- Speedwell -- Biographies | Vie ̉la ferme -- Saskatchewan -- Speedwell | Écrivains canadiens-anglais -- 20e sic̈le -- Biographies | Speedwell (Sask.) -- BiographiesDDC classification: 971.24/2 | B LOC classification: PR9199.3.W47 | O48 2006Summary: In Of This Earth, Rudy Wiebe gives vivid life again to the vanished world of Speedwell, Saskatchewan, an isolated, poplar-forested, mostly Mennonite community – and Rudy’s first home. Too young to do heavy work, Rudy witnessed a way of life that was soon to disappear. And we experience with him the hard labour of clearing the stony, silty bushland; the digging out of precious wells one bucket of dirt at a time; sorrow at the death of a beloved sister; the disorienting searches for grazing cattle in the vast wilderness sloughs and the sweet discovery of the power of reading. Rare personal photographs (reproduced throughout the book) and the fragile memories of those who are left give shape to the story of Mennonite immigrants building a life in Canada, the growth and decline of the small Speedwell community, the sway of religion, and a young boy’s growing love of the extreme beauty of the aspen forests – as well as how all these elements came to inform his destiny as a writer. A hymn to a lost place and a distant time, Of This Earth follows the best of memoirs in the tradition of Sharon Butala’s The Perfection of the Morning and W. G. Sebald’s Austerlitz. It is an evocation of the Canadian west that only a writer of Rudy Wiebe’s powers could summon.
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Item type Home library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book A J M Library 868-5076
B WIEB (Browse shelf) Available 18696

In Of This Earth, Rudy Wiebe gives vivid life again to the vanished world of Speedwell, Saskatchewan, an isolated, poplar-forested, mostly Mennonite community – and Rudy’s first home. Too young to do heavy work, Rudy witnessed a way of life that was soon to disappear. And we experience with him the hard labour of clearing the stony, silty bushland; the digging out of precious wells one bucket of dirt at a time; sorrow at the death of a beloved sister; the disorienting searches for grazing cattle in the vast wilderness sloughs and the sweet discovery of the power of reading.

Rare personal photographs (reproduced throughout the book) and the fragile memories of those who are left give shape to the story of Mennonite immigrants building a life in Canada, the growth and decline of the small Speedwell community, the sway of religion, and a young boy’s growing love of the extreme beauty of the aspen forests – as well as how all these elements came to inform his destiny as a writer.

A hymn to a lost place and a distant time, Of This Earth follows the best of memoirs in the tradition of Sharon Butala’s The Perfection of the Morning and W. G. Sebald’s Austerlitz. It is an evocation of the Canadian west that only a writer of Rudy Wiebe’s powers could summon.

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