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The 2004 Award

The Navigator of New York by Wayne Johnston

The Navigator of New York by Wayne Johnston


 

Nominated by:

  • Halifax Regional Library, Dartmouth, Canada
  • Provincial Resource Library (St. John's Public Libraries), St John's, Canada
  • Cape Breton Regional Library, Sydney, Canada

Publisher of Nominated Edition:
Knopf Canada
ISBN 0676975321

the complete A-Z listing of nominated authors
ABOUT THE BOOK
This exhilarating novel of great depth and power is the story of one man's quest for the secret of his origins that ranges from nineteenth-century St. John's to the bustling streets of New York to the remotest regions of the Arctic.
When Devlin is young child, he and his mother, Amelia, are suddenly abandoned by his father, Dr. Francis Stead, who flees St. John's to practice medicine among the Eskimos. Soon after, Amelia disappears into the icy ocean off Signal Hill. Rather than return home, his father joins the American Lieutenant Peary on one of his attempts to reach the North Pole, but wanders off from camp one night and is never seen again. Now orphaned, Devlin grows up an outcast and a loner.
And then one day he receives an extraordinary letter - a letter that will challenge everything Devlin ever thought he knew about himself. He will sail from St. John's to New York to become the protégé of Dr. Frederick Cooke, Peary's great rival in the race for the pole. While in Manhattan, he falls in love with a young woman who has an astonishing family connection to Amelia.
In The Navigator of New York, Wayne Johnston's descriptions of place - whether of the frozen Arctic wastes or the city of New York, bursting with New York, bursting with the energy of a metropolis about to become the capital city of the globe - evoke an extraordinary physicality and conviction. A remarkable achievement that seamlessly weaves fact and fabrication, it continues the masterful reinvention of the historical novel Wayne Johnston began with his lavishly praised The Colony of Unrequited Dreams and illustrates why he has been called "the most distinctive talent this country has produced since Mordecai Richler" (The Globe and Mail).

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Wayne Johnston is the author of five previous novels, including The Colony of Unrequited Dreams, which was nominated for both the Governor General's Award and the Giller Prize, and winner of the Canadian Authors Association Award for Fiction and the Thomas Raddall Atlantic Fiction Prize. His other novels include The Divine Ryans and Human Amusements. Baltimore's Mansion, his bestselling memoir, won the inaugural Charles Taylor Prize for Literary Non-Fiction and the University of British Columbia Medal for Canadian Biography. Wayne Johnston was born and raised in Newfoundland and now lives in Toronto.

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