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The Morning After
The Morning After: The 1995 Quebec Referendum and the Day That Almost Was | Chantal Hebert, Jean Lapierre
4 posts | 3 read
A #1 national bestseller, winner of the QWF Mavis Gallant Prize for Non-Fiction, and finalist for the BC National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction and the Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political Writing, The Morning After is a sly, insightful and wonderfully original book from one of Canada's most popular political analysts, Chantal Hébert, and one of Quebec's top political broadcasters, Jean Lapierre. Only the most fearless of political journalists would dare to open the old wounds of the 1995 Quebec referendum, a still-murky episode in Canadian history that continues to defy our understanding. The referendum brought one of the world's most successful democracies to the brink of the unknown, and yet Quebecers' attitudes toward sovereignty continue to baffle the country's political class. Interviewing seventeen key political leaders from the duelling referendum camps, Hébert and Lapierre begin with a simple premise: asking what were these political leaders' plans if the vote had gone the other way. Even two decades later, their answers may shock you. And in asking an unexpected question, these veteran political observers cleverly expose the fractures, tensions and fears that continue to shape Canada today.
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review
rabbitprincess
Pickpick

This was an interesting exercise, discussing what the various players in the Quebec sovereignty referendum of 1995 thought might have happened or were prepared to have happen if the referendum had been in favour of Quebec separating. This was a key moment in Canadian politics for me, so a lot of familiar faces here. It's a short, breezy read. Recommended if you're interested in Canadian political history.

review
twohectobooks
Pickpick

A fun look at what might have been if the 1995 Quebec referendum had resulted in a yes vote instead of a no. Was really interesting to read about the experiences of politicians I knew so well at the time via Royal Canadian Air Farce (I was 9). #canada150

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twohectobooks
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..., Manning says he would have made speeches so fiery that they "would have peeled the paint off the ceiling of the House of Commons. ..."

lol, get out of here Preston Manning.

#canada150

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twohectobooks
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Just showing off my current bedside table books.