Paperback / softback
ISBN:
9781772012330
Pages: 264
Pub. Date:
September 15 2019
Dimensions: 8.5" x 5.5" x 0.8125"
Rights: Available: WORLD
Categories
Non-Fiction / LCO006000
“By June, Philip’s view of English Bay, what’s left of it, will be utterly gone. It was always going to happen. For years now, it’s been getting harder and harder to see what’s out there. For years now, it’s been getting harder and harder to know what to do.”
Eight linked stories, all set around Christmastime in Vancouver’s West End neighbourhood, explore the seasonal tug-of-war between expectation and disappointment. These tales give shelter to characters from various walks of life whose experience of transcendence leaves them more alienated than consoled.
I Saw Three Ships captures a West End community vanishing under pressure from development and skyrocketing real-estate prices. As arch as they are elegiac, as funny as they are melancholy, these stories honour a cherished period in the history of the West End. Sometimes twisted, sometimes tender, I Saw Three Ships will speak to all who have ever been stuck spinning their wheels at the corner of Heathen and Holy.
Richardson’s prose is dense for a dense neighbourhood. He stuffs jokes and memories into each paragraph, just as his characters stuff treasured stuff into their apartments ... It’s an elegiac holiday read as characters ache and reminisce while the beloved landmarks of the West End are claimed in the background by “cranes, backhoes, diggers.”
—The Tyee
"Richardson won the Stephen Leacock Medal for Humour in 1994 for Bachelor Brothers’ Bed and Breakfast, the first book in his Bachelor Brothers trilogy. With I Saw Three Ships, Richardson might have another award winner on his hands."
—Winnipeg Free Press
"A compassionate book ... with the added bonus of being quirky."
—The Ormsby Review
“Richardson is in fine form in these stories, many of which appeared first in the Georgia Straight, Reader’s Digest or on CBC Radio. Expanded and polished for publication in this volume, they represent a triumph of whimsy and compassion, humility, humour and lapidary prose.”
—Tom Sandborn, Vancouver Sun
"A compassionate book ... with the added bonus of being quirky"
—The Ormsby Review
“An elegiac holiday read as characters ache and reminisce while the beloved landmarks of the West End are claimed in the background by 'cranes, backhoes, diggers.'"
—The Tyee
“Richardson has crafted a gift for all seasons here.”
—Tom Sandborn, Vancouver Sun