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The Navigator of New York is set against the background
of the tumultuous rivalry between Lieutenant Peary and Dr. Cook
to get to the North Pole at the beginning of the 20th century.
It is also the story of a young man’s quest for his origins, from
St. John’s, Newfoundland, to the bustling streets of New York,
and the remotest regions of the Arctic.
Devlin Stead’s father, an Arctic explorer, stops returning home
at the end of his voyages and announces he is moving to New York,
as “New York is to explorers what Paris is to artists”; eventually
he is declared missing from an expedition. His mother meets an
untimely death by drowning shortly after. Young Devlin, who barely
remembers either of them, lives contently in the care of his affectionate
aunt and indifferent uncle, until taunts from a bullying fellow
schoolboy reveal dark truths underlying the bare facts he knows
about his family. A rhyme circulated around St. John’s further
isolates Devlin, always seen as an odd child who had inherited
his parents’ madness and would likely meet a similar fate.
Devlin, who has always learned about his father through newspaper
reports, now finds other people’s accounts of his parents are
continually altering his view of his parents. Then strange secret
letters start to arrive, exciting his imagination with the unanticipated
notion that his life might contain the possibility of adventure.
Nothing is what it once seemed. Suddenly a chance to take his
own place in the world is offered, giving him courage and a newfound
zest for discovery. “It was life as I would live it unless I went
exploring that I dreaded.”
Caught up in the mystery of who his parents really were, and anxious
to leave behind the image of ‘the Stead boy’, at the age of twenty
Devlin sails, carrying only a doctor’s bag, to a New York that
is bursting with frenzied energy and about to become the capital
city of the globe; where every day inventors file for new patents
and three thousand new strangers enter the city, a city that already
looks ancient although taller buildings are constructed constantly.
There he will become protégé to Dr. Cook, who is restlessly preparing
for his next expedition, be introduced into the society that makes
such ventures possible, and eventually accompany Cook on his epic
race to reach the Pole before the arch-rival Peary. This trip
will plunge Devlin into worldwide controversy -- and decide his
fate.
Wayne Johnston has harnessed the scope, energy and inventiveness
of the nineteenth century novel and encapsulated it in the haunting
and eloquent voice of his hero. His descriptions of place, whether
of the frozen Arctic wastes or the superabundant and teeming New
York, have extraordinary physicality and conviction, recreating
a time when the wide world seemed to be there for the taking.
An extraordinary achievement that seamlessly weaves fact and fabrication,
it continues the masterful reinvention of the historical novel
Wayne Johnston began with The Colony of Unrequited Dreams.
REVIEW QUOTES
“Beautiful [and] evocative…. Johnston is an accomplished storyteller,
with a gift for both description and character, which he uses
masterfully here.” -- Booklist
“A captivating narrative that delves into both the noble and the
seedier aspects of the human need to discover and explore…. The
polar expeditions generate considerable narrative tension…. Johnston’s
ability to illuminate historical settings and situations continues
to grow with each book, and this powerful effort is his best to
date.” -- Publisher's Weekly
“Navigator is generously stuffed with crisp writing, rich
characterizations, and haunting descriptions of the harsh beauty
of the Arctic…. Marginally less wonderful, then, than The Colony
of Unrequited Dreams (1991). But all that means is that it’s
merely better than about 90 percent of most contemporary fiction.”
-- Kirkus Reviews, starred
"Readers have been wondering whether Johnston could possibly top
(or even equal) his splendid fictional saga of Joey Smallwood,
The Colony of Unrequited Dreams. The answer is a slightly
qualified yes. There is the same magical blend of fact and imagination,
the same compelling drive to use fiction to answer the questions
left unanswered by the historical record, and the same stylistic
brilliance that can turn a description of icebergs into a sensory
adventure rarely achieved in the pages of a modern novel." --
Bronwyn Drainie, Quill and Quire
“This passion for exploration and being the first to reach
remote, unexplored parts of the world illuminates this enthralling
book…. Johnston has created a powerful novel that portrays the
romance, wonderment and deprivation of Arctic exploration, while
at the same time capturing the taut, emotional intensity of a
lonely, misunderstood young man at the core of the story…. Johnston
masterfully conjures up a cast of characters…whose tragic story
has a depth and scope which propels the reader towards a fascinating
conclusion.” -- Karen Shewbridge, Dailies (St. John’s)
Praise for Wayne Johnston:
“The Colony of Unrequited Dreams makes Wayne Johnston one
of those formidable Canadians, like Alice Munro or Margaret Atwood,
that Americans simply can’t ignore.” -- Newsday
“[A] prodigiously talented author. . . . Wayne Johnston is well
on his way to becoming the most distinctive talent this country
has produced since Mordecai Richler.” -- The Globe and Mail
“Baltimore’s Mansion [is] a masterpiece of creative non-fiction.”
-- National Post
“The Colony of Unrequited Dreams is a classic historical
novel [that] will make a permanent mark on our literature.” --
The Toronto Star
“Mesmerizing.” -- The New York Times Book Review
“Why I love reading Wayne Johnston: The reader goes skittering
through Wayne Johnston’s novels, driven inexorably forward on
the force of his characters, on the power of his wit. Unlike most
recent bestselling novels that are remembered for the plane flight
and then promptly forgotten, Wayne’s stories have characters who
move in and take up permanent residence.” -- Mary Walsh
“His books are beautifully written, among the funniest I’ve ever
read, yet somehow at the same time among the most poignant and
moving.” -- Annie Dillard
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Wayne Johnston was born in Newfoundland in 1958 and grew up in
Goulds, a small community a few miles south of St. John's. When
he was a boy, he couldn’t imagine a world beyond the island. “The
only outside world I ever saw was on television, and I didn’t
really even believe that world existed.” People were still divided
over the Confederation with Canada, which had happened only in
1949. His family had a habit of moving around to different neighbourhoods
and his schooling was ‘hyper-Catholic’, traits which would feature
in his autobiographical first novel.
He graduated with a BA (Hons) in English from Memorial University
of Newfoundland, and worked from 1979 to 1981 as a reporter at
the St. John's Daily News. Being a reporter was a crash course
in how society works, but he realized he didn’t want it as a career.
“I’m not that outgoing of a person and you have to be in order
to be a good reporter.” He moved away from Newfoundland, firstly
to Ottawa, and took up the writing of fiction full-time. In 1983
he graduated with an MA from the University of New Brunswick.
His first book, The Story of Bobby O’Malley, was published
shortly after, and won the W.H.Smith/Books in Canada First Novel
Award. He followed this success two years later with The Time
of Their Lives, which won the Canadian Authors' Association
Award for Most Promising Young Writer.
His third novel, The Divine Ryans, again a portrait
of Irish Catholic Newfoundland, centres on a nine-year-old hockey
fanatic, whose father dies and whose family goes to live with
relatives who once had money but are fast declining. Time Out
has called it “achingly funny, needle sharp…with heart, soul
and brains”. One of Johnston’s most comic novels, it earned him
the title of ‘the Roddy Doyle of Canada’. The Divine Ryans
won the Thomas Raddall Atlantic Fiction Prize and has been
adapted into a film starring Oscar-nominated actor Pete Postlethwaite.
Johnston wrote the screenplay himself for this and also for the
adaptation of his next novel, Human Amusements, also optioned
for film.
The Colony of Unrequited Dreams, Johnston’s fifth novel,
in 1998 was shortlisted for the most prestigious fiction awards
in Canada, the Governor General's Award and the Giller Prize,
the Stephen Leacock Award for Humour and the Rogers Communication
Writers Trust Fiction Prize; it won the Thomas Raddall Atlantic
Fiction Prize and the Canadian Authors Association Award for Fiction.
A glowing New York Times Book Review cover story caused
the book to leap to the upper ranks of the Amazon.com top 100
selling books of the day. It has been called a ‘Dickensian romp
of a novel’, which uses the career of Newfoundland's first premier
to create a love story and a tragi-comic elegy to an impossible
country.
Published across North America and Europe in several languages,
the novel caused some controversy in Canada among those who recalled
the real Joey Smallwood, a man who was hated by many Newfoundlanders,
including Johnston’s own family, for bringing the island into
Canada. Although his strongly anti-confederate family could barely
bring themselves to mention Smallwood’s name, Johnston read a
biography of the politician when he was 14.
Johnston considered carefully the different ways of establishing
‘fictional/historical plausibility’ in the novel. Re-reading Don
Delillo's novel Libra, he observed how “Delillo gave himself
the freedom to invent scenes, incidents, conversations as long
as they seemed plausible within the fictional world that he created.”
He also considered Salman Rushdie’s Midnight's Children,
where, in spite of the magic realism, India still gains independence
in 1948, and political figures are elected or assassinated under
the same circumstances as their real-life counterparts. He decided
he would not change or omit anything that was publicly known.
“I would fill in the historical record in a way that could have
been true, and flesh out and dramatize events that, though publicly
known, were not recorded in detail. Most importantly, I would
invent for Smallwood a lover/nemesis (Sheilagh Fielding) who could
have existed (but didn't) and wove her and Smallwood's story into
the history of Newfoundland. This would be my plausibility contract
with the reader.”
In 1999 he published Baltimore's Mansion, his first non-fiction
book, a family memoir that also became a national bestseller and
won the inaugural Charles Taylor Prize for Literary Non-Fiction.
Johnston uses the stories of his own childhood and his father
and grandfather to cast light on Newfoundland’s struggle over
relinquishing independence in 1949. A National Post reviewer
concluded that it was a ‘non-fiction novel’ drawing on all Johnston’s
narrative powers to “shape the materials of real life into a work
of astonishing beauty and power”. In another review, Quill
and Quire said “I began to smell the smells, hear the lilt,
and experience a sense of the fierce attachment Newfoundlanders
feel to their home province no matter where they live,” commenting
that Newfoundland geography, history and culture permeates Johnston’s
books.
Johnston has lived in Toronto since 1989, although he has to date
written exclusively about Newfoundland. “I couldn't write about
the island while I was there,” he says. “Life was too immediate.
I was too inundated by the place and its details. I'd write about
something and see it when I walked across the street the next
day.” A “benign homesickness” has become a kind of fuel for writing
about the island. He talks of Newfoundland as being too “overwhelmingly
beautiful and substantial” to capture. To write with any kind
of objectivity, "I need distance to get that sense of what is
important and what is significant and what is not."
AWARDS
Nominee 2002 - Giller Prize
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