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Vancouver

par David Cruise, Alison Griffiths (Auteur)

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1075252,740 (3.77)3
Vancouver is a startlingly beautiful city of dreams and desires. Its mountains, rivers, ocean, and islands are arresting to the eye and exciting to the soul. The long and varied human history of this magical place is irresistibly grand and eventful. Vancouver -- the city, the land -- has al-ways been a place of appetites, of licenses offered and liberties taken. Since the time the humans crossed the Bering Strait and journeyed down the Pacific Coast seeking a fabled land of plenty, Vancouver, caught between soaring mountains and a vast ocean, has been a destiny for the spirit.Beginning in the dying era of the last Ice Age, Vancouver unfolds with the story of Tooke, the last survivor of a Siberian people and ancestor to the first nations of Vancouver. Moving through history in a rich, ever-expanding tapestry, Vancouver reveals a fascinating cast of characters. Long before recorded history, a young girl faces the terrifying prospect of marriage into a faraway tribe. Hundreds of years later, a Georgian cartographer aboard a Spanish exploration fleet nearly meets his end at the hands of her descendants. In the passing of the next centuries, a Scottish trapper becomes the reluctant leader of a fur-trading outpost on Vancouvers shores, and a Chinese peasant boy seeks an elusive fortune. The burgeoning colony of Vancouver lures a turn-of-the-century British adventurer and a German noble. In modern times, a superstar singer and film actress meets her destiny in the form of a young native girl struggling to free herself from the citys impoverished downtown eastside. The characters of Vancouver are all vastly different, yet they all share something -- a powerful attraction to a grand and giving land. Their stories intertwine, touching the extremes of human experience: riches, bravery, betrayal, crime, passion, and forbidden love.… (plus d'informations)
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5 sur 5
This is a group of short stories about Vancouver from earliest man to 2003. The stories are sort of linked together through a few jade beads that apparently are sacred in native culture. Whether this is in fact true or not is moot.

This is a hard book to start as the stories of early man are boring to be frank. The authors don't really have a feel for describing early life and I almost put the book down several times. Frankly the first 150 pages of this 900 page book could be ignored without much loss other than the legend of the beads.

The book finally became interesting with the story of Darrog Wiley and the time of 1839 in Vancouver's trading history. This is over 200 pages into the book so there is tough sledding to stay with this book that long. However, from then on it is a great read. Notable characters in succeeding stories are Soon Chong, Warburton Pike, Nanak Singh, Konrad Von Schaumberg, Walter Dolby and Tiffany Dolby. Each character giving you insight into the life of a different type of immigrant to Vancouver and different aspect of Vancouver life.

I would have given this book 5 stars except for that torturous first 200 pages. ( )
  Lynxear | May 4, 2011 |
Cruise and Griffiths had plenty of models for their thick novel, Vancouver, and all by one writer: James Mitchner. Mitchner was the pioneer of the “sweeping saga” sub-sub-genre of historical fiction, and Cruise and Griffiths have followed closely in his steps. The model is simple: step forward in time, starting at some suitably dim point in the ancient past, to the present day.

Vancouver starts, not in the Pacific Northwest of British Columbia, but somewhere farther north 15,000 years before the present. Like Mitchner (and, incidentally, like Ayn Rand), Cruise and Griffiths subscribe to the “great man” theory of history: progress, advance and change are made by unique individuals who rise above circumstance to do great things. The great man who first came south to the present location of the beautiful city on the coast of British Columbia, they imagine, was a fellow named Manto. Manto traveled through an ice-free corridor. Never mind that the existence of an ice-free corridor probably never existed, and that the most likely route to the peopling of North America was by coastal island-hoppers: Manto’s story, like all the stories in this novel, is exciting.

All the stories in this novel are, as well, in many ways fairly formulaic. The great man (or occasionally woman), starting from a position of loss, conquers nature, culture and circumstance in order to change history, to act as a pivot for things to come. And he (or she) gets the girl (or boy) along the way. To call the linked stories that comprise Vancouver formulaic, though, is not to disparage the book: formulas exist because they work, and because they’re entertaining. And Vancouver is nothing if not entertaining.

The link between the stories is a set of jade beads, brought by Manto from his homeland (presumably from somewhere in Siberia or farther south, though Cruise and Griffith’s geography is vague). The jade beads appear generation after generation, connecting each character with those who have come before. After 700-some pages, the weight of the linkages become somewhat ponderous: Cruise and Griffiths have set themselves a difficult task, and in the conclusion things get a little contrived.

In its series of set-piece bio-pics, the novel covers all the major players of Vancouver’s history. The Indians, of course, came first. Then there were the European explorers, and Juan de Fuca gets his moment in the sun. From the earliest days of the actual city, the Chinese have been major players. Various gold rushes figure prominently, as does the real estate business. The section that picks up Vancouver in the 1960s features the stock market and, curiously, makes no mention of draft dodgers. (The science fiction writer William Gibson was one such American who made his way to Vancouver in the 1960s.) The novel comes full circle, in a sense, by ending in 2003 with the story of Ellie Nesbutt, a young Indian woman who discovers something “unbelievably beautiful”: “We are a great people…. Some of us have just forgotten.”

Vancouver has been unfairly criticized for not really painting much of a picture of the actual city. That wasn’t the authors’ intent: it’s a saga of colonization, not a portrait. And although in many ways imperfect, Vancouver is a page-turner that will surely please anyone in love with our quiet neighbor to the north.

Originally published in Curled Up with a Good Book ( )
1 voter funkendub | Sep 30, 2010 |
Panoramic historical fiction of Vancouver from pre-historic to modern era. Language changes to fit era depicted. Well researched. ( )
1 voter DETROTT11 | Apr 22, 2006 |
An epic of the area ( )
TBR
  miketroll | Mar 15, 2007 |
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David Cruiseauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Griffiths, AlisonAuteurauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
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Vancouver is a startlingly beautiful city of dreams and desires. Its mountains, rivers, ocean, and islands are arresting to the eye and exciting to the soul. The long and varied human history of this magical place is irresistibly grand and eventful. Vancouver -- the city, the land -- has al-ways been a place of appetites, of licenses offered and liberties taken. Since the time the humans crossed the Bering Strait and journeyed down the Pacific Coast seeking a fabled land of plenty, Vancouver, caught between soaring mountains and a vast ocean, has been a destiny for the spirit.Beginning in the dying era of the last Ice Age, Vancouver unfolds with the story of Tooke, the last survivor of a Siberian people and ancestor to the first nations of Vancouver. Moving through history in a rich, ever-expanding tapestry, Vancouver reveals a fascinating cast of characters. Long before recorded history, a young girl faces the terrifying prospect of marriage into a faraway tribe. Hundreds of years later, a Georgian cartographer aboard a Spanish exploration fleet nearly meets his end at the hands of her descendants. In the passing of the next centuries, a Scottish trapper becomes the reluctant leader of a fur-trading outpost on Vancouvers shores, and a Chinese peasant boy seeks an elusive fortune. The burgeoning colony of Vancouver lures a turn-of-the-century British adventurer and a German noble. In modern times, a superstar singer and film actress meets her destiny in the form of a young native girl struggling to free herself from the citys impoverished downtown eastside. The characters of Vancouver are all vastly different, yet they all share something -- a powerful attraction to a grand and giving land. Their stories intertwine, touching the extremes of human experience: riches, bravery, betrayal, crime, passion, and forbidden love.

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