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The Pagan Nuptials of Julia chronicles the lives of ordinary English-speaking Quebeckers who “did not go the other way” down the 401, a neglected Canadian minority that saw its treasured world sacrificed by statist deceit and disowned with “stricken, evasive looks” even by its own kind. With a vivid, contrarian insight, Keith Henderson shows us that not all change is even-handed or mending, and that when it embodies “refinement and ‘necessary humanity,” the Past merits passionate preservation. Contemplating these at times gothic, always superbly crafted tales, alert readers will find themselves querying their fashionable complacencies while they ponder a vision conservative in the very best of senses – one that revives the classical faith in human bonds and meaning, and prompts us to remember that we are “born into the arms of love.” Reminiscent of the works of Hawthorne, Mansfield, Mann, and Sinclair Ross, Keith Henderson’s The Pagan Nuptials of Julia presents the brilliant, interrogative creations of one of Canada’s finest “journalists of the soul.”
“The Pagan Nuptials of Julia takes us from Montreal to rural Italy, where Julia was born…. Its a story that says something profound about the human condition. It feeds the soul…. ” — The Globe and Mail “This book is an interesting well written collection of stories told from a variety of viewpoints male, female, young, old, married, single, divorced.” — The Montreal Review of Books “The story though that sticks with me the most is The Garden of Earthly Delights, perhaps because this is also my favorite painting by Hieronymus Bosch. How Henderson manages to fashion an allegory about the protagonists tainted raspberry patch leading to his subsequent illness and the interpretation of the Bosch painting is a marvel to behold. He writes about a scene in the painting of a man surrounded by the permutation of human evil and another figure glancing at the world with wistful despair at the pleasure of the tavern he has just forsworn: a drunken lout pissing against a wall, a tattered roof, a Dutch whore beckoning from a shutter-buckled window.Perhaps it was the sense of plague that gave so skeletal a quality to the life of those times just as the sense of holocaust has to our own. Juxtaposed with this is his own disease from eating the tainted berries that he states is of a far less spiritual nature. Again, an encapsulated summary of what has happened to our notion of suffering humanity. It is at this point that I want to conclude with why such writing matters. Hendersons vision in these stories reflects the loss of value in our post-modern world, a world of quotidian, material concerns and empty longings. Gone are the grand themes of art from our lives, he suggests, and we are much the poorer for this. Besides Henderson being a master of style, it is because of such insights and affirmation that this is good writing one that makes no apologies and is unremitting in its endorsement of the human spirit.” — Zsolt Alapi, Montreal Rampage, December 2018 “As leader of Quebecs Equality Party from 1993 to 2003, Keith Henderson was hardly shy about expressing his views on the rights of English-speaking Quebecers. In The Pagan Nuptials of Julia Henderson shrewdly weaves his political insights into nine fictional tales of Anglos who remained in Quebec to deal with an increasingly difficult situation.” — Concordia University Magazine, December 2005