"Once there was a family with a Highland name who lived beside the sea." So begins "As Birds Bring Forth the Sun," a 1985 entry from Island. The story continues, "And the man had a dog of which he was very fond." And there you have the basic elements of an Alistair MacLeod story: dog, family, and sea. The author--whose 2000 novel No Great Mischief won him a measure of long-overdue acclaim--shuffles these elements into a surprisingly infinite variety of configurations, always with the same precise, confident, quiet language.
His big theme is the abandonment of the rural. Though his characters live in the fishing communities of Newfoundland and Nova Scotia, the seaside isn't a place where they dwell contentedly. In half the stories, young men and boys feel a pull toward academe and the center of the country. In the other half, academically successful middle-aged men return to the wild eastern coast of Canada to try to reclaim the life they left behind. Both dilemmas are impossible to resolve--no one can be both a city mouse and a country mouse--and MacLeod wisely doesn't offer easy solutions.
What makes the writing sing, though, is the specificity of his descriptions of rural life. He tells you exactly how things work: "The sheep move in and out of their lean-to shelter, restlessly stamping their feet or huddling together in tightly packed groups. A conspiracy of wool against the cold." The people here are ultimately defined by the physical world, and MacLeod has a farmer's visceral feel for geography. As he writes in "The Lost Salt Gift of Blood": "Even farther out, somewhere beyond Cape Spear lies Dublin and the Irish coast; far away but still the nearest land, and closer now than is Toronto or Detroit, to say nothing of North America's more western cities; seeming almost hazily visible now in imagination's mist." This is regional fiction in the best sense: it belongs to one perfectly evoked place. --Claire Dederer
From Library Journal
One of Canada's most important writers, MacLeod grew up in Cape Breton. Here he presents a powerful collection of short stories set on Canada's Eastern shore, where the traditions and Gaelic language of transplanted Scots continue in a harsh new world. All of these affecting, elegiac tales focus on the strong ties of loving kin, particularly the link between fathers and sons. Fathers share the experience of work with their sons, and boys puzzle over family events and tragedies and learn to be men in the close-knit communities. Sadly, as times change, fathers lose their sons, who become educated men and leave the land and sea for professions in the city. MacLeod's characters are deeply touching and memorable, and their simple lives are rich with loyalty and affection for their families and way of life. The sumptuous language, which immerses the reader in this stunning but unrelenting land, begs to be read aloud. A very special collection; recommended for all public libraries.DCathleen A. Towey, Port Washington P.L., NY Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From AudioFile
Eight sensual, sentimental tales in a minor key about the small lives of rural Canadian fisherfolk, miners, and farmers are noteworthy for their lyricism and authentic detail. What concerns the author is what concerns his subjects--family, love, the struggle to make a living, pride. The readings in this CBC selection vary from the stentorian pretentiousness of Frank Perry to the superbly atmospheric renderings of Gordon Pinsent and Joseph Rutten. All have been indifferently mastered, suffering intermittent stridency and loss of the upper register. Y.R. © AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine
From Booklist
MacLeod commands a high reputation as a short-story writer in his native Canada, but few readers in the U.S. will have heard of him. Let this collection of 16 stories, then, establish his name here. From the soil, sea, and inhabitants of Cape Breton Island, MacLeod draws the material for his stories. He measures the psychological effects of the harshness of this place in opposition to the warmth between family members. In the opening story, "The Boat," which introduces the geographical setting for the collection as a whole, a boy grows up feeling his mother's bitterness because he loved his father so much. "To Every Thing There Is a Season" is an essaylike remembrance of a childhood Christmas and the arrival of "our golden older brother." And in "As Birds Bring Forth the Sun," MacLeod borrows the properties of the fairy tale to tell a story about cu mor glas, the big gray dog. The author writes a pure, limpid prose that is at once elegant and flinty. Brad Hooper
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Frederick Busch, author of The Night Inspector
The honest emotion is as sensually rendered as the blood, salt, and waterlogged wood of Cape Breton....every word feels true.
John Sutherland. New York Times Book Review, front page review, 18 February 2001
Rarely does a great writer offer himself to us with an oeuvre so complete.
Jane Brox, Boston Globe, 15 April 2001
Cadenced, mesmerizing stories...rarely have I been pulled into short works the way I have been pulled into these.
Review
?Alistair MacLeod?s stories are as regional and universal as the work of Faulkner or Chekhov. And they are, I think, as permanent.?
?Michael Ondaatje
?Stunning.? The quality of the writing matches the very best in the world.? The stories are about us and here is that rare voice, a unique voice, to illuminate our experience.?
?Edmonton Journal
?The book is a treasure.? These are stories well worth returning to, with layers to uncover gradually.? It doesn?t get any better than this.?
?Toronto Star
?If you buy one book this year, let it be Island.? You will have in your possession not only some of the best short stories written in the twentieth century, but some of the best short stories ever written in the English language?These are universal stories for all time.?
?Kitchener-Waterloo Record
?Every story is touched with the beauty and truth of genius?
?Irish Times
?One of the finest masters of prose in the world?these short stories have established MacLeod as a writer whose every word is set in place with clean and enduring perfections.?
?Scotsman
?These stories have slowly become famous for their control of tone and cadence and for MacLeod?s ability to handle pure, raw emotion?Neither contemporary trend nor modern ironies interest him. The genius of his stories is to render his fictional world as timeless.?
?Colm Tóibín
?MacLeod?s lyricism succeeds in leaving a reader both harrowed by and envious of all the sorrow, violence and ravenous love.?
-New York Times Book Review
From the Hardcover edition.
Book Description
Sixteen spare, evocative masterworks: men and women acting out their own peculiar mortality against the unforgiving landscape of Cape Breton Island. Until the recent publication of Alistair MacLeod's first novel, No Great Mischief, his reputation as one of Canada's most important writers rested entirely on the stories collected in this book, and on this basis he was included in the Modern Library's 200 greatest writers in English since 1950. These stories are about death, family ties, and the pull of traditions transplanted from Scotland to a harsh New World. Reviewing MacLeod in the New York Times, Louise Erdrich wrote, "the young eventually realize that though they speak English, the old language [Gaelic] is internalized, that the sound and meaning of it rise to haunt them in the same way that the ancient mythologies and superstitions, spun through generations, exert an ineluctable hold." Joyce Carol Oates gives us a precise image of the experience of reading these stories: "that sudden feeling of insecurity that comes to a traveler in unmapped country; a sense of immediacy, cinematic in its vividness."
Island: The Collected Stories FROM OUR EDITORS
"Graceful and elegiac," "stunning," "lyrical" -- these are just a few of the the terms used to describe the work of Alistair MacLeod. Hailed as one of Canada's most important writers and celebrated internationaly for his two collections of short stories, he astonished U.S. audiences with the publication -- at age 64! -- of his first novel, No Great Mischief. A passport to a place where time is fluid and history is ever-present, Island is a book about men and women who are bound to their physical setting as much as they are tied to each other.
FROM THE PUBLISHER
The introduction, discussion questions, suggested reading list, and author biography that follow are intended to enhance your group's reading of Alistair MacLeod's Island . We hope they will aid your understanding of this powerful short story collection, representing thirty years of MacLeod's writing about his beloved Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, and the descendants of the Scottish Highlanders who inhabit this rugged and beautiful land.
FROM THE CRITICS
John Sutherland - New York Times Book Review
There is something immensely reassuring about MacLeod's late-career success. Good writing, it seems, will out. Talent like his needs no hype. . . . Rarely does a great writer offer himself to us with an oeuvre so complete yet so small.
John Sutherland
Rarely does a great writer offer himself to us with an oeuvre so complete. New York Times Book Review
Jane Brox
Cadenced, mesmerizing stories...rarely have I been pulled into short works the way I have been pulled into these.
Publishers Weekly
HCollected in one edition for the first time, the 16 short stories of Canadian writer MacLeod (No Great Mischief) span 30 years of his career and brilliantly evoke the lives of the people of his native Cape Breton Island. The place itself is conjured as a character--the stories are anchored by descriptive passages of lobster fishing, the gray waves of the Atlantic, the deep freeze of winter and the Nova Scotian dawn. Coming-of-age experiences are rendered through pivotal moments: "The Return" describes a first-time visit to the island through the eyes of a 10-year-old boy, and "In the Fall" evokes an incident on a family farm and a boy's growing comprehension of the things that are out of his parents' control. "Second Spring"--the only story to hit a comic note in the often somber collection--is the tale of a seventh-grade boy's desire to breed the perfect calf. One of MacLeod's hallmarks is the nesting of tales within tales: in "The Road to Rankin's Point," a dying young man who returns to his grandmother's house high among the island's treacherous cliffs relays the earlier story of his grandfather's death and the harsh but determined life that followed. Themes of family, work, superstition and Scottish tradition enlarge these beautifully crafted stories. (Feb.) Forecast: McLeod made it onto public radar screens with the much-heralded publication earlier this year of his first novel, No Great Mischief, but he was included on the Modern Library's list of the 200 greatest writers in English since 1950 solely on the basis of his stories. Fans of the novel will likely approach Island as something new, since the original two collections reissued here in one volume are out of print. Expect healthy sales. Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.
Library Journal
One of Canada's most important writers, MacLeod grew up in Cape Breton. Here he presents a powerful collection of short stories set on Canada's Eastern shore, where the traditions and Gaelic language of transplanted Scots continue in a harsh new world. All of these affecting, elegiac tales focus on the strong ties of loving kin, particularly the link between fathers and sons. Fathers share the experience of work with their sons, and boys puzzle over family events and tragedies and learn to be men in the close-knit communities. Sadly, as times change, fathers lose their sons, who become educated men and leave the land and sea for professions in the city. MacLeod's characters are deeply touching and memorable, and their simple lives are rich with loyalty and affection for their families and way of life. The sumptuous language, which immerses the reader in this stunning but unrelenting land, begs to be read aloud. A very special collection; recommended for all public libraries.--Cathleen A. Towey, Port Washington P.L., NY Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Read all 6 "From The Critics" >
WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING
The honest emotion is as sensually rendered as the blood, salt, and waterlogged wood of Cape Breton....every word feels true. Frederick Busch, author of The Night Inspector