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The Sandbar

By (author): Jean-Paul Daoust

Translated by: Susan Ouriou

The Sandbar is a snapshot of the 1950s and ’60s “Golden Age” of America, following a family and the colourful clientele of their privately-owned cocktail lounge.

AUTHOR

Susan Ouriou

Susan Ouriou is an award-winning writer, editor and literary translator, with over thirty translations and co-translations of fiction, non-fiction, children’s and young adult literature to her credit. She won the Governor General’s Literary Award for Translation. She lives in Calgary.


AUTHOR

Jean-Paul Daoust

Since 1976, Jean-Paul Daoust has published over thirty works of poetry and two novels. Daoust was the laureate of the Governor General’s Award in 1990 for Les cendres bleues, a poetry anthology translated into many languages. In 2009, he won the Grand Prix Quebecor from the Trois-Rivières International Poetry Festival for Le vitrail brisé.

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Excerpts & Samples ×
The Sandbar is a collection of vignettes from The Sandbar, a small-town watering hole in Northern Michigan owned by an eccentric couple with a penchant for stiff drinks. At an early age, their nephew gains an appreciation for exotic cocktails and for the quirky intricacies of family relations. The Sandbar follows Nephew’s experiences as a displaced Québécois youth growing up at the bar against the backdrop of such monumental events as the Detroit riots, Marilyn Monroe’s death and the beginnings of the Hippie movement. The Sandbar is a snapshot of the 1950s and ’60s “Golden Age” of America, following a family and the colourful clientele of their privately-owned cocktail lounge.The Sandbar is a collection of vignettes from The Sandbar, a small-town watering hole in Northern Michigan owned by an eccentric couple with a penchant for stiff drinks. At an early age, their nephew gains an appreciation for exotic cocktails and for the quirky intricacies of family relations. The Sandbar follows Nephew’s experiences as a displaced Québécois youth growing up at the bar against the backdrop of such monumental events as the Detroit riots, Marilyn Monroe’s death and the beginnings of the Hippie movement. The Sandbar is a snapshot of the 1950s and ’60s “Golden Age” of America, following a family and the colourful clientele of their privately-owned cocktail lounge.

Reader Reviews

Details

Dimensions:

120 Pages
5.25in * 8.5in

Published:

January 31, 2013

Publisher:

Quattro Books

ISBN:

9781927443293

Featured In:

All Books

Language:

eng

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