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Full description for Atlantica

  • The world has taken notice. From Alistair MacLeod&#146s recent IMPAC literary award, through movies based on the work of David Adams Richards and Sheldon Currie, to the epic television series based on the work of Bernice Morgan, the international community has soundly acknowledged the critical and commercial success of Atlantic writers. Atlantica is the first major anthology of Atlantic fiction since Best Maritime Short Stories was published in 1988 and showcases stories by some of Canada&#146s most exciting authors &#151 established, newly popular, and emerging. Given the regional penchant for storytelling, it&#146s not surprising that the Maritimes and Newfoundland produce a continuous stream of spellbinding writers. Among the stories in Atlantica are Anne Simpson&#146s Journey Prize-winning &#147Dreaming Snow,&#148 Carol Bruneau&#146s &#147The Tarot Reader,&#148 &#147Batter My Heart&#148 by Lynn Coady, Bernice Morgan&#146s &#147Poems in a Cold Climate&#148 &#147The Train Family&#148 by Joan Clark, &#147Missing Notes&#148 by David Helwig, &#147The Party&#148 by Herb Curtis and &#147Clearances&#148 by Alistair MacLeod. Readers from &#147away&#148 will recognize Sheldon Currie&#146s hilariously gothic tale &#147The Glace Bay Miner&#146s Museum&#148 as the basis of Helena Bonham Carter&#146s acclaimed movie Margaret&#146s Museum. Some stories have been excerpted from novels, including David Adams Richards&#146s The Bay of Love and Sorrows, Wayne Johnston&#146s The Colony of Unrequited Dreams, John Steffler&#146s The Afterlife of George Cartwright, and Donna Morrissey&#146s Kit&#146s Law. Remarkably diverse in age, style, and cultural identity, the writers in this anthology raise a common voice that defines Atlantic Canada. Each with an individual approach to language and writing, they offer a collective view of the east, conscious of tradition but not confined by it. By turns funny, poignant and pensive, the stories in Atlantica firmly place eastern Canadian culture on the world map of literature.