Record Details
Book cover

Elle : a novel

Book  - 2003
FIC Glove
1 copy / 0 on hold

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Location
Victoria Available

Browse Related Items

  • ISBN: 0864923155
  • Physical Description 205 pages
  • Publisher Fredericton, N.B. : Goose Lane Editions, [2003]

Content descriptions

General Note:
Canada Reads Top 40 Essential Canadian Novels of the Decade.
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 21.95
Awards Note:
Governor General Literary Award for Adult Fiction, 2003.

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Summary for ISBN Number 0864923155
Elle : A Novel
Elle : A Novel
by Glover, Douglas
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Summary

Elle : A Novel


Imagine a 16th-century society belle turned Robinson Crusoe, a female Don Quixote with an Inuit Sancho Panza, and you'll have an inkling of what's in store in Douglas Glover's outrageously Rabelaisian new novel -- his first in ten years. Elle is a lusty, subversive riff on the discovery of the New World, the moment of first contact. Based on a true story, Elle chronicles the ordeals and adventures of a young French woman marooned on the desolate Isle of Demons during Jacques Cartier's ill-fated third and last attempt to colonize Canada. Of course, the plot is only the beginning. The bare outline is a true story: the Sieur de Roberval did abandon his unruly young niece, her lover, and her nurse on the Isle of Demons; her companions and her newborn baby did die; and she was indeed rescued and taken home to France. Beyond that, Glover's Rabelaisian imagination takes over. What with real bears, spirit bears, and perhaps hallucinated bears, with mystified and mystifying Natives, with the residue of a somewhat lurid religious faith, and with a world of self-preserving belligerence, the voluble heroine of Elle does more than survive. Elle brilliantly reinvents the beginnings of this country's history: what Canada meant to the early European adventurers, what these Europeans meant to Canada's original inhabitants, and the terrible failure of the two worlds to recognize each other as human. In a carnal whirlwind of myth and story, of death, lust and love, of beauty and hilarity, Glover brings the past violently and unexpectedly into the present. In Elle, Glover's well-known scatological realism, exuberant violence, and dark, unsettling humour give history a thoroughly modern chill.