Cadillac Cathedral
- Publisher
- Ronsdale Press
- Initial publish date
- Feb 2014
- Category
- Humorous, Literary, General
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781553802983
- Publish Date
- Feb 2014
- List Price
- $18.95
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9781553803003
- Publish Date
- Feb 2014
- List Price
- $13.99
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
Jack Hodgins, one of Canada’s favourite storytellers, has returned with a new tale in Cadillac Cathedral. In this story, situated on Vancouver Island, the literary home of many of his earlier books, Hodgins lovingly recreates the rural community of Portuguese Creek. It is here we meet Arvo, a Finn, who has worked in logging camps all his life and now spends his retirement rescuing abandoned cars to restore in his garage, where his loyal group of friends congregate to keep him company. When the group hears that an old friend has died, they decide to drive south to the big city to pick up the body. A road trip ensues—but not just any road trip, for it takes place in a Cadillac Cathedral, a remarkable hearse built in the 1930s, which Arvo has refurbished. Along the way, the friends encounter adventures that create detours into country life. We learn about the unusual marriages that keep couples apart and together. There is a winsome widow with her eye on Arvo, and another mysterious widow in the big city for whom Arvo appears to retain strong feelings. Here is Hodgins at his humorous best, capturing a timeless world that is yet very much of our time.
About the author
Jack Hodgins was raised in Merville, on Vancouver Island, and graduated from the University of British Columbia. Until recently, he taught fiction writing at the University of Victoria. His novels and story collections include: Spit Delaney’s Island, The Invention of the World, Innocent Cities, Broken Ground, Distance, and Damage Done by the Storm. In the spring of 2010, he published his newest novel, The Master of Happy Endings (Thomas Allen). A Passion for Narrative (a guide to writing fiction) is used in classrooms and writing groups across Canada and Australia. Hodgins’ fiction has won the Governor General’s Award, the Canada-Australia Prize, the Commonwealth Prize (Canada and the Caribbean) and the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize, amongst others. He has given readings, talks, and workshops in Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and several European countries, and has taught an annual fiction workshop in Mallorca, Spain. In 2006 he received both the Terasen Lifetime Achievement Award and the Lieutenant Governor’s Award for Literary Excellence in British Columbia. In 2009 the Governor General appointed him a Member of the Order of Canada. He and his wife Dianne have three grown children and three grandchildren. Jack Hodgins’ website is www.jackhodgins.ca
Editorial Reviews
“Hodgins returns to the small-scale stories and vivid characters of his earliest fiction . . . leavened with wry humour and everyday absurdity.” –National Post
“Hodgins’ gentle humour and sense of hope make Cadillac Cathedral an object lesson about what’s important in life for any age.” –Vancouver Sun
“Hodgins is a master taleteller and he’s never going to be caught dead with only one dish on his table. As always, his fictional Vancouver Island community and characters become large as life in all their laid-back and humorous detail.” –BC BookWorld
“A warm, gentle novel brimming with charcoal grey humour. . . . a sweet tale that often finds a Zen spot between funny and wistful.” –Quill & Quire
“A warm, gentle novel brimming with charcoal grey humour. . . . a sweet tale that often finds a Zen spot between funny and wistful.”—Quill & Quire
“Hodgins’ gentle humour and sense of hope make Cadillac Cathedral an object lesson about what’s important in life for any age.”—Vancouver Sun
“Hodgins is a master taleteller and he’s never going to be caught dead with only one dish on his table. As always, his fictional Vancouver Island community and characters become large as life in all their laid-back and humorous detail.”—BC BookWorld
“Hodgins returns to the small-scale stories and vivid characters of his earliest fiction . . . leavened with wry humour and everyday absurdity.”—National Post