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The Retreat [Import] [Hardcover]

David Bergen (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0771012535 978-0771012532 September 9, 2008 First Edition
Bestselling novelist David Bergen follows his Scotiabank Giller Prize—winning The Time in Between with a haunting novel about the clash of generations — and cultures.

In 1973, outside of Kenora, Ontario, Raymond Seymour, an eighteen-year-old Ojibway boy, is taken by a local policeman to a remote island and left for dead.

A year later, the Byrd family arrives in Kenora. They have come to stay at “the Retreat,” a commune run by the self-styled guru Doctor Amos. The Doctor is an enigmatic man who spouts bewildering truisms, and who bathes naked every morning in the pond at the edge of the Retreat while young Everett Byrd watches from the bushes. Lizzy, the eldest of the Byrd children, cares for her younger brothers Fish and William, and longs for what she cannot find at the Retreat. When Lizzy meets Raymond, everything changes, and Lizzy comes to understand the real difference between Raymond’s world and her own. A tragedy and a love story, the novel moves towards a conclusion that is both astonishing and heartbreaking.

Set during the summer of the Ojibway occupation of Anicinabe Park in Kenora, The Retreat is a finely nuanced, deeply felt novel that tells the story of the complicated love between a white girl and a native boy, and of a family on the verge of splintering forever. It is also a story of the bond between two brothers who were separated in childhood, and whose lives and fates intertwine ten years later.

A brilliant portrait of a time and a place, The Retreat confirms Bergen’s reputation as one of the country’s most gifted and compelling writers.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“Bergen’s characters move and breathe, demonstrating the delicate balance between hope and despair, salvation and damnation.”
Toronto Star

“David Bergen is a master of taut, spare prose that’s both erotic and hypnotic. . . .”
— Miriam Toews

“Bergen’s novels are marvels of spare prose and weighty emotion.”
Saturday Night

“The writing of Winnipeg's David Bergen, who won a host of prizes including the Giller for his last novel, The Time in Between, sometimes gets compared to that of Cormac McCarthy; taut, psychological fiction that floats just above a kind of menacing nihilism. His new novel, The Retreat, keeps to the pattern.”
Winnipeg Free Press

“Paired with chirping crickets and a porch-side perch, the finely wrought prose and bucolic setting make for a perfect early-fall-evening companion.”
Toronto Life

“The Giller Prize–winner’s latest book is a gripping tale that leaves the reader heavy-hearted yet driven to turn the page.”
Canadian Living

“Throughout the story, the spare writing lends an atmosphere of foreboding, even dread, that makes for compelling reading.”
Edmonton Journal.

The Retreat is a powerful and engrossing novel, further proof that the late-blooming Bergen is now one of Canada's very best writers.”
— Montreal Gazette

“…the novel speeds along in [Bergen’s] characteristically exquisite prose.”
The Walrus

“Bergen excels at creating dramatic scenes of survival. . . . A meaningful and significant work.”
Globe and Mail

“Bergen makes every word count.”
Ottawa Citizen

About the Author

David Bergen’s award-winning fiction includes The Case of Lena S., winner of the Carol Shields Winnipeg Book Award and a finalist for the Governor General’s Award, and The Time in Between, winner of the Scotiabank Giller Prize, the McNally Robinson Book of the Year Award, and the Margaret Laurence Award for Fiction. It was also named a Kiriyama Prize Notable Book and longlisted for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award. A member of the 2007 Scotiabank Giller Prize jury, Bergen lives in Winnipeg.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 328 pages
  • Publisher: McClelland & Stewart; First Edition edition (September 9, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0771012535
  • ISBN-13: 978-0771012532
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 6 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,688,412 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very good, September 25, 2008
By 
This review is from: The Retreat (Hardcover)
had not read David Bergen's previous book, The Time in Between, which is a Giller Prize winning book. I traditionally shy away from these types of books as I find them a tad too pretentious for my own taste. However, I thought the storyline for the Retreat sounded so interesting that I would try it.

The book starts out in 1973 in a small town in Ontario called Kenora. Our main character is a young man who, Raymond Seymour, who is dating the cop's daughter - and this is not going over well with the cop or the cop's brother. After a "conversation" between Raymond and the cop's brother, Raymond finds himself dumped on a remote island.

A year later, The Retreat, created by guru Doctor Amos is born. The Retreat is packaged as a savior of souls and a giver of serenity. This is enticing to the Byrd family who have major problems of their own and are looking for an escape. However, Lizzy, the young girl of the family cannot find what she is so desperately searching - enter Raymond. Raymond, once again, has a relationship with a girl who is his complete opposite (at least according to standard customs) and both Raymond and Lizzie will realize just how difficult and unfair life can be.

This novel is extremely dark and brooding - it takes a frank and somewhat disturbing look at the unhappiness in people and how they try to run away - trying to find something or someone who can make them happy. This book also does not shy away from highlighting the prejudice that lays in many of us and was particularly rampant in the 70's.



I realized that the writing is absolutely beautiful. The prose and the progression of the story are joined together effortlessly and the end result is a novel deep with meaning and sensation.

Reading this book made me very sad and impressions of it stayed with me for a very long time.

As I mentioned, this is not my usual type of novel, but I am glad that I made an exception.

A highly recommended read
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Haunting story, September 10, 2008
This review is from: The Retreat (Hardcover)
The book opens in Kenora, Ontario in 1973. Raymond Seymour, a young native man, has just been dropped off and left to die on a remote island by a local cop. His crime? Dating the white cop's niece.

The Byrd family arrives in the summer of 1974 to stay at the Retreat, which is just outside Kenora as well. It's leader is the self styled 'Doctor'. He promotes the Retreat as a spiritual and practical escape for the summer. But to the reader his motives seem to have a darker side.

" Take a group of people and plunk them down in a village, a village that is created from scratch, and make those people live together. What happens? That's what interests me."

Mrs. Byrd sees this Retreat as her salvation from her unhappy life. Her husband Lewis loves his wife and will go along with whatever she wants. Their four children - Lizzy, the oldest, her brothers William and Everett and the the youngest boy Fish, aren't thrilled to be there.

The Retreat is also populated with other guests, all seeking or hiding from something.1974 is also the year of the Ojibway occupation of Anicinabe Park in Kenora.

Lizzy crosses paths with Raymond Seymour, who escaped from the island and now delivers fresh game to the Retreat. They begin a relationship.

What follows is a haunting, unsettling story of lives, wants, needs and undercurrents never quite brought to the surface. The clash of cultures and beliefs fuel the fire.

Bergen's phrasing and language are beautiful. I often had to stop and savour a phrase.

"He was moving his crooked fingers, as if attempting to pick up some slippery idea up off the floor."

I felt as if I was watching a train wreck. You don't want to see the destruction but feel compelled to witness it. As the novel hurtles towards it's inevitable end, I could not put it down. I was thinking about The Retreat long after I turned the final page.

Bergen is a previous winner of the Giller Prize for his last novel, The Time in Between.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Spare...and forgettable., October 13, 2008
This review is from: The Retreat (Hardcover)
This reads like a twentysomething CanLit offering.

There's very little in the way of resolution with any of the characters and their arcs. (Maybe this is the intent, to leave them where they are, as the Native peoples are left where they are; I don't think this work is *that* smart, though.)

It's conscientiously enough written, everything fits, the execution is lucid...but there was nothing there for me to hold onto.

Not particularly entertaining, not really engaging, and hardly memorable.
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