Canada Made Me

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Canada Made Me
Abstract
First published in England in 1958, this book is a bitter, critical reassessment of the moral and cultural values of Canada. Levine's account of his three-month journey from Halifax to Ucluelet, a fishing village on the west coast, is an unconventional portrait of Canada's underbelly. The book ends with the words: `I wondered why I felt so bitter about Canada. After all, it was all part of a dream, an experiment that could not come off. It was foolish to believe that you can take the throwouts, the rejects, the human kickabouts from Europe and tell them: Here you have a second chance. Here you can start a new life. But no one ever mentioned the price one had to pay; how much of oneself you had to betray.' Canada Made Me was regarded as so controversial that it did not appear in a Canadian edition until 1979. Critical opinion, however, has slowly swung around to the point the book was recently described in the Globe and Mail as a `laconic classic'. For this new edition Norman Levine has written an introduction which traces the book's publishing history and reputation.
Place
Erin, Ont.
Publisher
Porcupine's Quill
Date
1993
# of Pages
299 pages
Language
English
ISBN
0-88984-168-3 978-0-88984-168-0
Library Catalog
Open WorldCat
Citation
Levine, N. (1993). Canada Made Me. Porcupine’s Quill. https://archive.org/details/canadamademe00levi