Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Fiction Historical

David

A Novel

by (author) Ray Robertson

Publisher
Dundurn Press
Initial publish date
Aug 2009
Category
Historical, Action & Adventure, Historical
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780887624124
    Publish Date
    Aug 2009
    List Price
    $32.95

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

"God and whiskey have got me where I am. Too little of the one, too much of the other." – David King, Chatham, Canada, 1895.

Born a slave in 1847, but raised as a free man on the world-renowned, African-American Elgin Settlement near present-day Chatham, Ontario, David King is a man whose life has been defined by his violent rebellion against the very person who freed him – the Reverend William King.

Far from the pulpit he was intended to fill as the Reverend King’s anointed successor, David has lost his faith in God and humanity. He has also turned his back on both his past and his own people by abandoning the Elgin Settlement for nearby Chatham after a final, shattering confrontation with the Reverend King. Undoubtedly, the most unconventional man in town, David is also – thanks to his illegal after-hours tavern, Sophia’s, and his highly lucrative grave robbing business – one of Chatham’s richest citizens, white or black, and certainly its best read. Triggered by the news of the elderly Reverend King’s death, the middle-aged David is compelled to revisit a past he thought he left behind, but which – as evidenced by his inability to embrace the happiness he so dearly earned – he clearly has not.

Ranging over the early years of the pioneering Elgin Settlement, David’s wild, whiskey-fueled early years in Chatham as a factory worker and apprentice grave-robber, and his day-to-day life with his ex-prostitute German lover in present-day, 1895 Chatham,David is a portal to a fascinating, if mostly unknown piece of Canadian history, as well as, the story of one man’s search for wisdom, peace, and forgiveness.

About the author

Ray Robertson is the author of five novels: What Happened Later, Gently Down the Stream, Home Movies, Heroes, and Moody Food. The latter two received starred reviews from Quill & Quire, and the last made it to the top one hundred lists of The Globe and Mail and The Vancouver Sun. In 2004, Ray published Mental Hygiene, a collection of his articles, essays, and book reviews. Ray lives in Toronto, where he teaches Creative Writing at the University of Toronto.

Ray Robertson's profile page

Editorial Reviews

Apart from its vivid sense of time and place, the strength of Robertson's novel is the steely distinctiveness of this voice, as unwavering in its prickly pessimism as it is touching in its untethered yearning.

Toronto Star

...a wonderful read where complex issues are expressed through eloquent language. With David and Loretta, Ray Robertson has introduced two of the most magnetic characters in modern Canadian literature. Historical accuracy and vivid depiction of time and place is coupled with imagination to offer a fascinating alternative to a deeper story. Not only does this novel make an important contribution to our growing knowledge of local Black history and life in late Victorian Canada, it is a powerful and timeless insight into the human condition.

Northern Terminus: The African Canadian History Journal

Related lists