They came from different parts of the old British Empire: Alistair Randall from Kenya and Rashid Hassan from India. Perhaps, they should have been enemies, but they were not. It was a defining moment in Alistairas life when he sat on the floor across from Rashid one cold winteras day in Edmonton in 1969, and Rashid spoke with unsmiling logic about the need to shoot Alistair. But before that collision there was Jenadie MacIlwaine; without her Alistair would not have met Rashid. Telling a story set mostly on the campus of Capilano College in the 1960s, Crossing Second Narrows narrates the interplay among this unlikely triangle of characters who believed they could change the world: Alistair, the liberal white AcmigrAc from postaMau Mau Kenya; Rashid, the self-styled, dark-skinned Marxist from India; and Jenadie, the outspoken American blonde in the middle. It provides a historically accurate account of the searching for answers to the questions of the times: Why did the conservative universities try to squash innovative upstart community institutions? Why did the students and faculty at British Columbiaas fledgling Simon Fraser University militantly go on strike? How did these become literally life-and-death issues in a world stripped of its comfortable traditions, including, on occasion, clothing? In Crossing Second Narrows, author Bill Schermbrucker uses what Michael Ondaatje once described as athe truth of fiction, a to reconstruct an important story out of the heady Age of Aquarius.The Persuasive Essay question I had posed was, aAt what other time in history would you have preferred to live, and why (or why not)? ... favouring the horse and buggy days before cars, or exciting epochs like the Italian Renaissance. But oneanbsp;...
Title | : | Crossing Second Narrows |
Author | : | Bill Schermbrucker |
Publisher | : | iUniverse - 2013-03-05 |
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