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Nights too short to dance  Cover Image Book Book

Nights too short to dance / Marie-Claire Blais ; translated by Katia Grubisic.

Blais, Marie-Claire, 1939-2021 (author.). Grubisic, Katia, (translator.). Blais, Marie-Claire, 1939-2021 translation of: Cœur habité de mille voix. English. (Added Author).

Summary:

In 'Nights Too Short Dance', Rene, a Montreal resident and trans man in his 90s, confronts age and illness on a cold winters night. Charismatic as ever, he is surrounded by friends and lovers and over the course of the book, they look back over a century of struggle - Stonewall, the AIDS epidemic, the fight for queer rights that cost them dearly - and realize its not over. But neither is the love and joy. Marie-Claire Blais was born in Quebec City, QC. She died in 2021. A Dewey Diva pick.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781772603507 (trade paperback)
  • Physical Description: 215 pages ; 22 cm
  • Publisher: Toronto, ON : Second Story Press, [2023]
Subject: Female friendship > Fiction.
Lesbians > Fiction.
Older men > Fiction.
Sexual minorities > Law and legislation > Fiction.
Social movements > Fiction.
Transgender people > Fiction.
Genre: Social problem fiction.
Transgender fiction.
Novels.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Tsuga Consortium.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Cookstown Branch FIC Blais 31681010345288 FICTIONPBK Available -

  • Baker & Taylor
    "Reén suddenly feels like an old man. In his 90s, recovering at home after an illness, his mind will not leave the past. He is both comforted and annoyed by the officious care provided by his Russian nurse...A friend--or lover--will surely visit? And they do. Reén is soon surrounded. By the writer Johnie, the musician Doudouline, the theologian Polydor, thepainter l'Abeille, and éGrard, a lover of forbidden pleasures.They support each other...They reminisce about past loves, tragedies, fights...They steel themselves to take on the monster of bigotry and intolerance whenever it rears its ugly head, as it always does...Most of all, they find comfort and hope in each other's presence, and in the fight that so many are continuing: to assert our own identities, to love how we wish, and not be defined by what society expects."--
  • Orca Book Publishers

    René, a trans man, confronts age and illness on a winter’s night. Charismatic as ever, he is surrounded by friends and lovers. They look back over a century of struggle—Stonewall, the AIDS epidemic—and realize it’s not over. But neither is the love. Blais, a queer literary icon, brings to life pivotal moments in the fight for queer rights.

  • Orca Book Publishers

    Key Sales Points:

    • A lesbian icon, Marie-Claire Blais stature in the French literary world has been compared to Margaret Atwood.
    • Brings English readers across North America access to the last of Blais' critical work in the queer canon, with an unforgettable trans character as the central protagonist.
    • Written in Blais' celebrated stream of consciousness style, where characters merge together in long passages uninterrupted by traditional conventions of paragraph and punctuation.
    • Originally published in French as Un coeur habité de mille voix (Les Éditions du Boréal, 2021), fans of Blais will recognize in Nights Too Short to Dance the community of queer characters she introduced in her celebrated novels Les Nuits de l'Underground (1978) - English title Nights in the Underground, and L'Ange de la solitude (1989) - English title The Angel of Solitude.
    • A reflection on identity and mortality, the character of René, in his 90s and in failing health, brings readers the rare literary point of view of a much older queer character. Centres the themes that Blais established in her work: confronting bigotry, revelling in love both past and present, and the influence of art.

    René suddenly feels like an old man. Recovering at home after an illness, his mind will not leave the past. He is both comforted and annoyed by the officious care provided by his Russian nurse, who keeps referring to him as a woman. It is a lifetime struggle. Right now, René just wants to get out of his pajamas and dress elegantly, as in the old days of playing piano in cabarets. A friend—or lover—will surely visit? And they do. René is soon surrounded. By the writer Johnie, the musician Doudouline, the theologian Polydor, the painter l’Abeille, and Gérard, who was lost but never forgotten.
    They support each other, offering shelter from the snowy world outside. They reminisce about past loves, tragedies, fights. The Stonewall riots. The AIDS epidemic where they lost so much. The Women’s March on Washington. They steel themselves to take on the monster of bigotry and intolerance whenever it rears its ugly head, as it always does, again and again.
    Most of all, they find comfort and hope in each other’s presence and in the continuing struggle to assert our own identities, to love how we wish, and to not be defined by what society expects.
    An icon of queer literature, Marie-Claire Blais’s characters bring to life pivotal moments in the fight for queer rights.


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