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Nikolski
Nikolski | Nicolas Dickner
1 post | 10 read | 4 to read
Selected as the 2010 CBC Canada Reads Winner! Awards for the French-language edition: Prix des libraires 2006 Prix littraire des collgiens 2006 Prix Anne-Hbert 2006 (Best first book) Prix Printemps des LecteursLavinal Intricately plotted and shimmering with originality, Nikolski charts the curious and unexpected courses of personal migration, and shows how they just might eventually lead us to home. In the spring of 1989, three young people, born thousands of miles apart, each cut themselves adrift from their birthplaces and set out to discover what or who might anchor them in their lives. They each leave almost everything behind, carrying with them only a few artefacts of their lives so far possessions that have proven so formative that they cant imagine surviving without them but also the accumulated memories of their own lives and family histories. Noah, who was taught to read using road maps during a life of nomadic travels with his mother their home being a 1966 Bonneville station wagon with a silver trailer decides to leave the prairies for university in Montreal. But putting down roots there turns out to be a more transitory experience than he expected. Joyce, stifled by life in a remote village on Quebecs Lower North Shore, and her overbearing relatives, hitches a ride into Montreal, spurred on by a news story about a modern-day cyber-pirate and the spirit of her own buccaneer ancestors. While her daily existence remains surprisingly routine working at a fish shop in Jean-Talon market, dumpster-diving at night for necessities its her Internet piracy career that takes off. And then theres the unnamed narrator, who we first meet clearing out his deceased mother s house on Montreals South Shore, and who decides to move into the city to start a new life. There he finds his true home among books, content to spend his days working in a used bookstore and journeying though the many worlds books open up for him. Over the course of the next ten years, Noah, Joyce and the unnamed bookseller will sometimes cross paths, and sometimes narrowly miss each other, as they all pass through one vibrant neighbourhood on Montreals Plateau. Their journeys seem remarkably unformed, more often guided by the prevailing winds than personal will, yet their stories weave in and out of other wondrous tales stories about such things as fearsome female pirates, urban archaeologists, unexpected floods, fish of all kinds, a mysterious book without a cover and a dysfunctional compass whose needle obstinately points to the remote Aleutian village of Nikolski. And it is in the magical accumulation of those details around the edges of their lives that we begin to know these individuals as part of a greater whole, and ultimately realize that anchors arent at all permanent, really; rather, theyre made to be hoisted up and held in reserve until their strength is needed again. From the Hardcover edition.
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meltedsquirrel
Nikolski | Nicolas Dickner
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I bought this book years ago from a thrift store, haven't heard anything about it or seen it mentioned anywhere. Decided that maybe it might be the book to break my slump.

Lindy It won the Governor General award but I haven't read it. Hope it works for your slump. 🍀 7y
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