Tuesday 30 April 2019

Literary Trail


Canada's Literary Trail 

We have many trails in Canada--- The Fundy Trail, the Confederation Trail, the Castor River Trail, Le P’tit Train du Nord, the Bruce Trail, to name a few. There are trails for hiking, biking, snowmobiling, ATVing, canoeing, skiing, dogsledding, horseback riding, motoring and more. 




The Fundy Trail, New Brunswick
But did you know that Project Bookmark Canada is creating a literary trail from coast to coast to coast in Canada?

The Literary Trail

The idea of this project is “to place fiction and poetry in the exact Canadian locations where literary scenes are set.” When you visit a Bookmark, you will find an excerpt from a story or poem on a large plaque that you can read "while standing in the characters’ footsteps.” You will also find information on the author. 


Bookmark for Alistair MacLeod's No Great Mischief 
 Port Hastings, Nova Scotia

What is the value of a Literary Trail? It will bring attention to our literature in which we will recognize ourselves and gain new perspectives of each other. In addition to supporting literacy, Project Bookmark fosters literary tourism by encouraging international readers to explore Canada through our fiction and poetry. 


Bookmarks

This project was launched in April 2009 and currently has 23 bookmarks in place across Canada, 17 of which are in Ontario. At this point, there is no Bookmark in our province! Come on, New Brunswick! We should have no problem in coming up with 23 New Brunswick Bookmarks from our rich literary landscape! 



New Brunswick's Literary Landscape




I envision a Bookmark in Nackawic, featuring the writing of humour writer, Colleen Landry.



Bookmark for Nackawic

I see a Bookmark at Walton’s Lake, celebrating the fiction of Susan White, author of seven books!



Bookmark for Walton's Lake

I picture a Bookmark in Oromocto, highlighting the mystery series of Mary Sawyer.

Bookmark for Oromocto


 I foresee a Bookmark at the Beaverbrook Art Gallery in Fredericton showcasing the writing of children’s author, Wendy MacLeod MacKnight.

Bookmark for Fredericton


And let's not forget these New Brunswick nuggets:

Tantramar Revisited
by Sir Charles G.D. Roberts
The Ships of Saint John by Bliss Carman
In the Hainesville Cemetery by Alden Nowlan
Low Tide at St. Andrews by E. Pauline Johnson

Low Tide at St. Andrews

Because the winter was long, April was hard, and tomorrow is May, let’s conclude this trail talk with the evocative and hopeful images in Sir Charles G. D. Roberts’ poem,

To Fredericton in May-Time

Charles G.D. Roberts

This morning, full of breezes and perfume,
  Brimful of promise of midsummer weather,
  When bees and birds and I are glad together,
Breathes of the full-leaved season, when soft gloom
Chequers thy streets, and thy close elms assume
  Round roof and spire the semblance of green billows;
  Yet now thy glory is the yellow willows,
The yellow willows, full of bees and bloom.


Under their dusty blossoms blackbirds meet,
  And robins pipe amid the cedars nigher.
Thro' the still elms I hear the ferry's beat.
  The swallows chirp about the towering spire;
The whole air pulses with its weight of sweet,
  Yet not quite satisfied is my desire!



Fredericton in May-Time
Odell Park



You can help build Canada’s Literary Trail! Go to this site and make a suggestion. (https://www.projectbookmarkcanada.ca/suggest-a-bookmark-form)











...Until Next Time...




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