Skip to content

From the archives

Football Fables

The beautiful game bestrides the world like a colossus

But Blind They Were

The fallacy of an empty continent

Alberta and Me

From a land of oil, true enough

Trying to Pass

A black Canadian as white during World War Two

Jack Kirchhoff

Emancipation Day

Wayne Grady

Doubleday Canada

326 pages, softcover

ISBN: 9780385677660

You have to hand it to Wayne Grady. When he steps outside his comfort zone, he makes it a giant step. In the midst of a distinguished career as a non-fiction writer and translator—14 books, 15 translations from the French (including works by Antonine Maillet, Yves Beauchemin and Daniel Poliquin), three Governor General’s Award nominations and one win (for Maillet’s On the Eighth Day)—he has produced his first novel. And not just any old novel, but one set during and just after World War Two in Newfoundland, Windsor and Toronto, featuring several black characters, including one who is desperately determined to pass for white, and dealing with music, race and family dysfunction. There are a lot of ways for this to go wrong, but Grady—a skilled, careful and knowledgeable writer—does not miss a step.

The main story of Grady’s novel, Emancipation Day, begins in 1943 in St. John’s, Newfoundland. Among the thousands of sailors in the port city is Jack Lewis...

Jack Kirchhoff is a freelance arts writer and editor in Toronto.

Advertisement

Advertisement