Bibliographic Information

The road past Altamont

by Gabrielle Roy ; translated from the French by Joyce Marshall

(A bison book)

University of Nebraska Press, 1993 printing, c1966

  • : pbk

Other Title

La route d'Altamont

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Note

"First Bison book printing: 1993"--T.p. verso

Originally published: Toronto : McClelland and Stewart, 1966

Contents of Works

  • My almighty grandmother
  • The old man and the child
  • The move
  • The road past Altamont

Description and Table of Contents

Description

First published in French in 1966, The Road Past Altamont pierces to the heart of a child's world, craeting a delicate, yet substantial network of impressions, emotions, and relationships. In her writing, Gabrielle Roy allowed "nothing extraneous or false to stand," according to the translator, Joyce Marshall. The literary style of Roy, whose fiction reflects her childhood on the Canadian prairie, has often been compared to that of Willa Cather. The Road Past Altamont takes a sensitive French-Canadian girl, Christine, from childhood innocence to maturity. Four connected stories reveal profound moments during her early years in the vastness of Manitoba. Christine's testament to Grandmother's creative power, her great adventure with an old gentleman at Lake Winnipeg and her clandestine one with a crude family of movers, her journey through time and space with aging Maman-all these characters and events convey Gabrielle Roy's preoccupation with childhood and old age, the passage of time and mystery of change, and the artist's relation to the world.

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