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list price: $14.99
edition:eBook
category: Biography & Autobiography
published: Apr 2012
ISBN:9781771000314
publisher: Douglas & McIntyre

And No Birds Sang

by Farley Mowat

tagged: personal memoirs, world war ii, canada
Description

Feisty icon; passionate Canadian; unrelenting foe of all pretension; energetic provocateur-at-large and most importantly, superb and dedicated writer, there cannot be a Canadian alive who is unaware of the legacy that is Farley Mowat. And No Bird Sang and A Whale for the Killing are the first books in a new Douglas & McIntyre library of handsomely redesigned paperback editions of Farley Mowat's work.

 

Turned away from the Royal Canadian Air Force for his apparent youth and frailty, Farley Mowat joined the infantry in 1940. The young second lieutenant soon earned the trust of the soldiers under his command, and was known to bend army rules to secure a stout drink, or find warm -- if non-regulation -- clothing. But when Mowat and his regiment engaged with elite German forces in the mountains of Sicily, the optimism of their early days as soldiers was replaced by despair. With a naturalist's eyes and ears, Mowat takes in the full dark depths of war -- and his moving account of military service, and the friends he left behind, is also a plea for peace. It is one of the most searing and unforgettable World War II memoirs from any Canadian.

About the Author

Farley Mowat (1921–2014), a famed Canadian writer, was the author of forty-five books, including fiction, history, and environmental works. Several of his books, including Never Cry Wolf, were made into films. Mowat was a winner of the Governor General’s Award for Literature, and also a recipient of the Order of Canada and an inductee of the Canadian Walk of Fame.

Editorial Reviews

"Mowat's finest work."

— Time

"Grim, moving, eloquent. Reads lik a novel and fixes images in the mind like a movie -- a cross between The Red Badge of Courage and Apocalypse Now."

— Newsweek

"An act of courage and ineffably moving."

— The Boston Globe

"Mowat's books have...defined the Canadian wilderness for readers all over the world -- the landscape, the isolation, the weather, animal and native life -- with a heightened sense of reality no other writer has achieved over the last six decades."

— Toronto Star

"In battle scenes of searing immediacy and resonating insights, [Mowat] conveys the immense toll war wages on men's psyches as they are thrown into suicidal situations by a sacrificial high command...powerful."

— Publishers Weekly

"Douglas & McIntyre have reissued 13 of Mowat's 'most cherished titles' in paperback, including And No Birds Sang, a book that clearly shows why Mowat is such an outstanding writer. His descriptions of the Italian countryside, combatants, battles and local civilians caught up in the maelstrom of war are highly evocative and create an instant and vivid image of his experiences in the reader’s mind."

— Chronicle Herald

"One of the very few books on World War II that can stand with the rich literature of World War I."

— The Washington Post Book World

"I admit, sheepishly, that I have never read any of Farley Mowat's novels. Until last week, that is, when I gobbled up two of his books, republished by Douglas & McIntyre: A Whale for the Killing and And No Birds Sang...I now understand the regard for Mowat's superb story-telling and dramatic prose...Luckily D&M has rescued Mowat's library...and we can newly appreciate him. Or introduce him to our children."

— Toronto Star

"A seemingly effortless evocation of the fire that shaped a Canadian generation...bound to rank as one of Mowat's major accomplishments."

— Mordecai Richler

"Superb...Comes stunningly close to describing the indescribably horror and terror of war."

— The New Yorker

"And No Birds Sang remains the devastating memoir, the brilliant soldier's reflection of war that this country has produced. Haunting. Maddening. Frightening. At times, even hilarious. There aren't enough adjectives, or enough space on a book jacket, for me to praise Farley Mowat enough."

— Joseph Boyden, author of Three Day Road

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