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list price: $11.99
edition:eBook
category: Art
published: Dec 2009
ISBN:9781926706054
publisher: Douglas & McIntyre

Book of Small, The

by Emily Carr, foreword by Sarah Ellis

tagged: canadian, essays, artists, architects, photographers
Description

The legendary Emily Carr was acclaimed as both an artist and a writer. Her first book, Klee Wyck, won the presitigious Governor General's Literary Award for non-fiction in 1941.

 

 

The Book of Small is a collection of thirty-six word sketches in which Emily Carr relates anecdotes about her life as a young girl in the frontier town of Victoria. She notes: "There were a great many things that I only half understood, such as saloons and the Royal Family and the Chain Gang." The young Emily, who gaver herself the nickname "Small," was an intense, observant and sensitive yet reebellious child, who often got into scrapes because of her frankness or innocence. The vividly told stories reval an awareness fo the comedy -- and pathos -- of people and situations. The also offer an intimate look into childhood in a pioneer society in Victorian Times. The Book of Small is a classic memoir of eearly childhood and a wonderful addition to The Emily Carr Library.

 

In her empathetic and engaging introduction, award-winning children's writer Sarah Ellis puts The Book of Small into the context of Emily Carr's life and times, which, she points out, have similarities to those of Lucy Maud Montgomery and Beatrix Potter.

About the Authors

Emily Carr

Young, spirited and rebellious, Emily Carr escaped a strict Victorian household to study art in the Paris of Picasso and Matisse. In middle age, she shook the dust of acceptable society from her shoes and began a passionate journey into the wilderness of British Columbia; the power of her genius made her one of the twentieth century's great painters. Fortunately, she also wrote. In her books, her warmth, her humanity, her sense of fun and the ridiculous combine to present a self-portrait of a remarkable woman and artist. -- Mary Pratt

Sarah Ellis

Young, spirited and rebellious, Emily Carr escaped a strict Victorian household to study art in the Paris of Picasso and Matisse. In middle age, she shook the dust of acceptable society from her shoes and began a passionate journey into the wilderness of British Columbia; the power of her genius made her one of the twentieth century's great painters. Fortunately, she also wrote. In her books, her warmth, her humanity, her sense of fun and the ridiculous combine to present a self-portrait of a remarkable woman and artist. -- Mary Pratt

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