From Publishers Weekly
Canadian novelist Coady makes her American debut with this touching and funny story of a teenage boy who becomes the victim of the rumor mill in his small rural Nova Scotia community in the early 1980s. Guy Boucher lives with his overworked mother, his reclusive goth sister and his loud, opinionated, boorishly conservative and usually drunk Uncle Isadore. The likable Guy is socially awkward but perceptive and intelligent, with a sharp wit that usually deserts him when he opens his mouth. Guy becomes enamoured of pretty, popular Corinne Fortune, a pampered girl from nearby Big Harbour who rejects him. Caught in a web of lies she's already spun about an imaginary boyfriend, and motivated by a teenager's taste for melodrama, Corinne tells a friend that Guy has treated her brutally. In the way of small communities, her untruths pass from mouth to mouth, gaining momentum until the whole town is worked up in a collective rage over the unwitting Guy, who can't understand why he's getting so many dirty looks. The novel is told from the alternating viewpoints of Guy, Corinne and other supporting characters, including Corinne's serious, sensible best friend, Pam; Corinne's precocious and neurotic older brother, Howard; and Guy's former English teacher, Alison, an American draft dodger and drinking buddy of Isadore's who habitually hangs out (or passes out) at Guy's house and becomes his unlikely mentor. Coady's voice is assured, and she has a sensitive ear for dysfunctional family dynamics and teenage posturing. Though the characters are not equally well developed one wishes that Corinne in particular was more nuanced this is an affecting coming-of-age story and a darkly comic picture of an insular, down-at-the-heels and alcohol-soddened community.Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
With this work (the author's second novel and first U.S. release), Canadian-born Coady marks herself as a literary talent to watch. While writing from the alternating perspectives of several key players, she centers on Guy Boucher, a teenager in Big Harbor, Cape Breton, who is trying to find his way amid a chaotic family and small-town justice. The story begins with Guy's Uncle Isadore, a career alcoholic oblivious to the wreckage he causes around him, whom a local judge places in the custody of his impoverished sister, Marianne, and her two teenagers. In exchange, Marianne is granted the use of Isadore's truck, which enables her to take a job and also lets Guy drive to town to see Corinne Fortune, a beautiful but troubled girl who complicates his life in an unexpected way. Coady stunningly captures the torment of adolescence as well as Uncle Isadore's inscrutable charm; no matter how strongly readers may want to detest Uncle Isadore, they will be unable to resist him. Highly recommended for most literary fiction collections.Tamara Butler, Olean P.L., NYCopyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
Anyone who is now, or has ever been, a teenager will relate strongly to Coady's compassionate, comic story of alienation and acceptance, family and friendship. For young Guy Boucher, life in Big Harbour is tediously oppressive. School is a joke, his friends are all losers, and the girl he thought liked him for some reason wants to have him killed. Growing up without a dad, the closest thing to a father Guy can turn to is his uncle Isadore, a failed hockey player, boxer, and unemployed steelworker. Indeed, the only thing Isadore excels at is drinking, and his alcoholic rages only contribute to Guy's sense of isolation and confusion. Trapped in a two-bit, dead-end town on the outskirts of nowhere, Guy longs to be someone and somewhere else: feelings that do not belong exclusively to the young. Perceptively grasping the insecurities that plague teenagers and haunt adults, from boys' macho posturings to girls' escapist fantasies, Coady's discerning portrayal of adolescent angst and mature malaise is nothing short of inspired. Carol Haggas
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
"A wise tale . . . Coady has crafted a detailed, intimate and often bleak look at life in a remote and insular corner of Cape Breton, N.S." --Debby Waldman
Review
"A wise tale . . . Coady has crafted a detailed, intimate and often bleak look at life in a remote and insular corner of Cape Breton, N.S." --Debby Waldman
Book Description
Lynn Coady"s fiction has been called "striking . . . [full of] crazy energy and hilarity" (National Post) and hailed for "avoiding the trendy, distancing devices of satire, cynicism and irony" (Globe and Mail). Coady"s third book, her first to be published in the United States, portrays a small community in Nova Scotia and the power of gossip and violence within it. In "Saints of Big Harbour," Guy Boucher, a fatherless teenager, finds himself at the center of an ugly rumor involving a girl idealized by her town. Through his eyes and the stories of those who surround him — his uncle Isadore, Dickensian and overbearing; Pam, a quietly wise girl with a predilection for Shakespeare; his draft-dodger English teacher; a pair of golden boys stuck in emotional adolescence — several versions of truth emerge and combine. As the story unfolds, so does a portrait of a community driven and oppressed by clichés of gender, strength and beauty, family and love. Villainy is an everyday affair in Big Harbour, and the closest thing to heroism is Guy"s dogged ingenuousness and makeshift dignity. In this, her most entertaining and profound book, Coady returns to the fertile territory explored by Ann-Marie MacDonald and Alistair MacLeod and again "displays a virtuosic charting of psychic ambiguity that never quits" (Toronto Star).
Saints of Big Harbour: A Novel FROM THE PUBLISHER
In Saints of Big Harbour, Guy Boucher, a fatherless teenager, finds himself at the center of an ugly rumor involving a girl idealized by her town. Through his eyes and the stories of those who surround him - his uncle Isadore, Dickensian and overbearing; Pam, a quietly wise girl with a predilection for Shakespeare; his draft-dodger English teacher; a pair of golden boys stuck in emotional adolescence - several versions of the truth emerge and combine. As the story unfolds, so does a rich and often funny portrait of a community driven and oppressed by cliches of gender, strength and beauty, family and love. Villainy is an everyday affair in Big Harbour, and the closest thing to heroism is Guy's dogged ingenuousness and makeshift dignity.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
Canadian novelist Coady makes her American debut with this touching and funny story of a teenage boy who becomes the victim of the rumor mill in his small rural Nova Scotia community in the early 1980s. Guy Boucher lives with his overworked mother, his reclusive goth sister and his loud, opinionated, boorishly conservative and usually drunk Uncle Isadore. The likable Guy is socially awkward but perceptive and intelligent, with a sharp wit that usually deserts him when he opens his mouth. Guy becomes enamoured of pretty, popular Corinne Fortune, a pampered girl from nearby Big Harbour who rejects him. Caught in a web of lies she's already spun about an imaginary boyfriend, and motivated by a teenager's taste for melodrama, Corinne tells a friend that Guy has treated her brutally. In the way of small communities, her untruths pass from mouth to mouth, gaining momentum until the whole town is worked up in a collective rage over the unwitting Guy, who can't understand why he's getting so many dirty looks. The novel is told from the alternating viewpoints of Guy, Corinne and other supporting characters, including Corinne's serious, sensible best friend, Pam; Corinne's precocious and neurotic older brother, Howard; and Guy's former English teacher, Alison, an American draft dodger and drinking buddy of Isadore's who habitually hangs out (or passes out) at Guy's house and becomes his unlikely mentor. Coady's voice is assured, and she has a sensitive ear for dysfunctional family dynamics and teenage posturing. Though the characters are not equally well developed one wishes that Corinne in particular was more nuanced this is an affecting coming-of-age story and a darkly comic picture of an insular, down-at-the-heels and alcohol-soddened community. Agent, Denise Bukowski. (Nov. 7) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
KLIATT - Susan Allison
Set in the fictional town of Big Harbour, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, this novel is a coming-of-age story about Guy Boucher. His mother, Marianne, works as a housekeeper and is well rid of her alcoholic, religious fanatic of a husband. Since the death of his grandfather, Guy, his mother and his sister, Louise, continue to live in the family home along with loud and boorish Uncle Isadore Aucoin, an alcoholic who alternately defends and destroys normal family life. The cultures of the stereotypical, rough-cut native French Canadians and the prejudiced townspeople of Big Harbour clash constantly, displaying routine abrasiveness and underlying distrust on both sides. Town police harass strangers, like Alison Mason, a draft-dodging teacher from New York and mentor/friend of Guy, as well as foreigners in general and French Canadians in particular. When nasty rumors start that Guy has taken advantage of a cute local flirt, Corinne Fortune, his life becomes a nightmare. Though certainly not "saints" in any traditional religious sense, each character tries to construct and remain faithful to his or her personal moral and ethical system of values. This is a grim, sometimes brutally realistic story that vividly captures the voices of rural teen culture struggling for space, justice, power, identity, and independence. Guy has a choice. Does he want to remain stuck in the established patterns of his life thus far or does he want to escape by making his own decisions and taking charge of his life? Coady's success lies in her ability to treat a potentially depressing story with both wry humor and irony. The novel will appeal especially to teens whose own experiences provide links to the personalities,situations, and relationships explored. KLIATT Codes: SARecommended for senior high school students, advanced students, and adults. 2002, Houghton Mifflin, 328p., Ages 15 to adult.
Library Journal
With this work (the author's second novel and first U.S. release), Canadian-born Coady marks herself as a literary talent to watch. While writing from the alternating perspectives of several key players, she centers on Guy Boucher, a teenager in Big Harbor, Cape Breton, who is trying to find his way amid a chaotic family and small-town justice. The story begins with Guy's Uncle Isadore, a career alcoholic oblivious to the wreckage he causes around him, whom a local judge places in the custody of his impoverished sister, Marianne, and her two teenagers. In exchange, Marianne is granted the use of Isadore's truck, which enables her to take a job and also lets Guy drive to town to see Corinne Fortune, a beautiful but troubled girl who complicates his life in an unexpected way. Coady stunningly captures the torment of adolescence as well as Uncle Isadore's inscrutable charm; no matter how strongly readers may want to detest Uncle Isadore, they will be unable to resist him. Highly recommended for most literary fiction collections.-Tamara Butler, Olean P.L., NY
Kirkus Reviews
Award-winning Canadian author Coady's US debut tells intertwined stories of unhappy adolescents-and unhappier adults-as their lives collide in Nova Scotia in the early 1980s. Guy Boucher lives with his struggling-to-make-ends-meet mother, his older and mostly absent sister, and his all-too-present uncle Isadore in a rural French Canadian community outside the town of Big Harbour. Guy's home life is a disaster. Isadore is an alcoholic bully whose new drinking pal is Guy's English teacher, an American draft dodger. (Heavy drinking by the men here is a given and depressing constant except when they're up at the monastery drying out.) At a dance in Big Harbour, where the Scots look down on the French, Guy meets a town girl, Corrine, who lets him dance with her five times. He pursues her with puppylike optimism, not quite picking up on her lack of interest, let alone disdain. In fact, Corrine has her own problems. Although pretty and popular, she has concocted an elaborate fantasy life complete with an older boyfriend to impress her peers, especially her sensitive, less popular friend Pam. Pam, distressed already by her father's descent into alcoholism and joblessness, is distraught for Corrine, especially after she makes Guy sound like an obsessed stalker. Pam passes her fears for Corrine on to the even less popular, more desperate Ann. After Ann tells the gossip about Corrine to her brother, who happens to be attempting a friendship with Corrine's own seriously troubled brother, the former high school golden boys go on a vengeful, indiscriminate rampage. Meanwhile, Guy's mother moves with him into town to escape Isadore. Officially suspected though not exactly charged with molesting Corrine,Guy hides out with his now sober English teacher until the truth wins out. Rich and spicy, but an iffy plot and a little thick and slow to boil.