Photo de l'auteur

David Cruise

Auteur de Vancouver

9 oeuvres 376 utilisateurs 12 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

David Cruise was born in 1950 and attended the University of Alberta. He is an award-winning Canadian writer who collaborates with his wife, Alison Griffiths, on books that require a great deal of research, such as Fleecing the Lamb: The Inside Story of the Vancouver Stock Exchange and Lords of the afficher plus Line: The Men Who Built the CPR. Cruise has also written for periodicals. His article titled "Powder Burns" won a Silver Medal for investigative journalism in the National Magazine awards competition in 1986. He also won a Canadian National Press Club award in 1987. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Comprend les noms: Cruise David

Œuvres de David Cruise

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1950
Sexe
male
Nationalité
Canada
Relations
Griffiths, Alison (wife)

Membres

Critiques

The book is really split into four parts. The first part was my favourite, with the history of the valley, and the role different groups played in creating the microcosm of the Annapolis valley and the South Mountain. It is apparent that a lot of research went into the investigation and capturing the history of the region, and leading it up to the role that the church and state had in shunning those that lived on the dreaded South Mountain, where no valley dweller dared to go. The second part describes the conditions that the Goler clan is living in and the abuse that occurred over generations that leads to a perpetual cycle of abusers abusing. The third section it to is when the hammer drops and arrests are made, victims are secured, and the court cases begin. I skipped over a lot of this part, way too graphic with details, and just disgusting some of the testimony that is presented. Last is the aftermath, how frustratingly light the judicial system was on these monsters. It concludes with one of the victims facing her worst nightmare and revisiting the mountain. The author does a great job in describing the pain the victims suffered, not only during the abuse, but a lifetime afterwards, never getting to experience a healthy life, but instead suffering a lifetime of memories of the neglect, abuse, and trauma. I had no idea that the valley that I know of, hid such horrors, almost as if the whole experience has been shunned, and hidden away, like the South Mountain has been for generations.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
sjh4255 | 2 autres critiques | Feb 28, 2023 |
She thought she couldn't do anything but she should one woman could stop the slaughter of the mustangs.
 
Signalé
ShelleyAlberta | 1 autre critique | Jun 4, 2016 |
How a single woman moved a nation to the plight of wild horses.
 
Signalé
ShelleyAlberta | 1 autre critique | Jun 4, 2016 |
Front Book Flap:
“The Annapolis Valley is one of the most beautiful places on the face of the earth. Apple blossoms, lush farms and lovely, secluded beaches have graced photographs and postcards without number. But there has been a dark evil within this idyllic land for more than two hundred years.

Overlooking the Valley is South Mountain, a long ridge of hills covered by dense forests which conceal tiny hamlets and isolated clusters of shacks set in small clearings. Lately, parts of the Mountain have become desirable places to live. But for most of the last two centuries it has been home to the “Clans” – thirty or so tight family groupings, living in their various Mountain enclaves. Many of them have survived the kind of poverty and deprivation associated only with the world's poorest nations.

… Then one day, a fourteen-year-old Mountain girl told authorities that her father had been “using her as a wife.” This revelation sparked a massive investigation which revealed a horrific tale of incest, sexual and physical abuse and psychological torture. Eventually, sixteen men and women, almost an entire generation of one Clan, faced more than one hundred and fifty criminal charges. At the same time, eleven children, also an entire generation of the same Clan, were taken from their homes.”
____________________

Why I read this now: I wanted to read the true story of the Goler clan, which inspired Lauren B. Davis’ novel, Our Daily Bread.

On South Mountain is well-written, impeccably researched, and an exceptional non-fiction that is difficult to put down. Admittedly, I knew very little about Nova Scotia’s clans, and nothing about the Golers. The story, however, is not one for all hearts. For me, I will continue to ask how did we, as a society, and in the 1980s, allow such travesty to be visited on our children, and simply turn the other way. People knew – church officials, politicians, teachers, doctors, social workers – and they chose to do nothing.

“For those innocents on the periphery, it is a prison sentence without end.” (208)
… (plus d'informations)
½
4 voter
Signalé
lit_chick | 2 autres critiques | Jun 9, 2013 |

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Alison Griffiths Author, Joint Author

Statistiques

Œuvres
9
Membres
376
Popularité
#64,175
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
12
ISBN
27

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