Cabbagetown: The Classic Novel of the Depression in Canada
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Garner, Hugh (Author)
Title
Cabbagetown: The Classic Novel of the Depression in Canada
Abstract
Toronto's Cabbagetown in the Depression...North America's largest Anglo-Saxon slum. Ken Tilling leaves school to face the bleak prospects of the dirty thirties-where do you go, what do you do, how do you make a life for yourself when all the world offers in unemployment, poverty and uncertainty?"As a social document, Cabbagetown is as important and revealing as either The Tin Flute or The Grapes of Wrath. Stern realism has also projected upon the pages of a whole gallery of types, lifelike and convincing. He is well fitted to hold the mirror up to human nature." Globe and Mail.Cabbagetown was first published in an abbreviated paperback edition in 1950 and was published in its entirety in 1968. This, the first quality paperback edition, contains the full unexpurgated text of Cabbagetown. --Publisher's description
Place
Toronto
Publisher
McGraw-Hill Ryerson
Date
2002
# of Pages
vi, 415 pages
Language
English
ISBN
0-07-091552-0 978-0-07-091552-7
Short Title
Cabbagetown
Citation
Garner, H. (2002). Cabbagetown: The Classic Novel of the Depression in Canada. McGraw-Hill Ryerson. https://archive.org/details/cabbagetownclass0000garn
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