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Big Town: A Novel of Africville
Big Town: A Novel of Africville
Big Town: A Novel of Africville
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Big Town: A Novel of Africville

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It’s summer, 1963, and Early and Toby dream of building an opera house in Africville, a black community struggling with poverty and illiteracy tethered to the north shore of Halifax, considered by many, a festering sore. But to simple-minded Early Okander, brightly painted houses sprinkled haphazardly across train tracks, it’s poetry. He and Toby enjoy idyllic days rafting on Bedford Basin, dreaming of blueberry pancakes, and scavenging for church doors in the nearby dump with Penny, the kid from up the hill who’s bobbed her hair and reinvented herself into Chub.

Both Early and Chub find refuge from abuse and intolerance around the kitchen table of Toby’s grandpa Aubrey—the interracial friendships much to the disapproval of Mrs. Aada Dupuis, Aubrey’s neighbour hell bent on making him husband number three. Safe and warm in this dilapidated house, the 1917 explosion and Aubrey’s war experiences are relived, along with the struggles of Toby’s parents and Aubrey’s long infatuation with Portia White, the Canadian opera star he believes will rescue the community. Only Mrs. Aada appreciates just how numbered their days in Africville are.

As Toby’s health fails and Early’s tormenting and reckless father evades the police, the city’s bulldozers begin levelling Africville house by house, its residents carted off in the back of garbage trucks. Aubrey steadfastly clings to hope until Chub discovers that her family is instrumental in the expulsion, and her rebellion leads to a simple act of kindness with tragic consequences.

Gone since 1970, Africville was a community of almost 400 people for over 150 years. To this day, its demise haunts Canada as one of the most notorious cases of government sanctioned racial discrimination.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 20, 2011
ISBN9781466056978
Big Town: A Novel of Africville
Author

Stephens Gerard Malone

STEPHENS GERARD MALONE currently lives and writes on Canada’s east coast. In 1994, he published his first novel Endless Bay (Mercury Press) under the pseudonym, Laura Fairburn. His second novel, Miss Elva (Random House, Canada) followed in 2005 and was short-listed for the Dartmouth Book Award. Malone’s third novel I Still Have A Suitcase In Berlin (Random House, Canada) took eight years to write and was released in May 2008 to critical praise. Malone’s next book Big Town, a novel of Africville (Nimbus Publishing/Vagrant Press, 2011) is available in stores and on-line now.

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Rating: 3.75 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This a novel that examines life in Africville, Halifax during the last two years before the Black community was moved. Narrated through the eyes of three teenagers, we experience what it was like to live in poverty enforced by racism.

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Big Town - Stephens Gerard Malone

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