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list price: $24.95
edition:Paperback
also available: eBook
category: Fiction
published: Jun 2013
ISBN:9781770892040
publisher: House of Anansi Press Inc
imprint: Arachnide Editions

For Sure

by France Daigle, translated by Robert Majzels

tagged: literary
Description

For Sure is among other things a labyrinth, a maze, an exploration of the folly of numbers, a repository, a defense and an illustration of the Chiac language. Written in dazzling prose — which is occasionally interrupted by surprising bits of information, biography, and definitions that appear on the page — Daigle perfectly captures the essence of a place and offers us a reflection on minority cultures and their obsession with language.

It is also the continuing story of Terry and Carmen, familiar to us from previous works, their children Etienne and Marianne, and all those who gravitate around the Babar, the local bar in Moncton — the Zablonskis, Zed, Pomme — artists and ordinary people who question their place in the world from a distinct point of view that is informed by their geography, and by their history, politics, and culture.

Masterfully translated from French by award-winning translator Robert Majzels, For Sure is the moving story of a family and a surprising, staggeringly original work that represents a corner of our country.

About the Authors
France Daigle is a prize-winning Acadian writer of novels and plays in French. She lives in Moncton, New Brunswick.

Robert Majzels is a novelist, poet, playwright and translator. He is the author of the full-length play This Night the Kapo (Playwrights Canada Press), and four novels, most recently Apikoros Sleuth (The Mercury Press, 2004) and The Humbugs Diet (The Mercury Press, 2007).

Awards
  • Short-listed, The Governor General's Literary Awards- Translation- French to English
Editorial Review

Daigle has written about contemporary New Brunswick like it never has been done before. Although her concerns lie in the past, the history of speech itself, she is not telling a story about our past as a metaphor for today. No, Daigle is embracing today to reveal what has happened and what may become.

— Telegraph Journal Salon Magazine

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