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M. Wylie Blanchet (1891–1961)

Autor(a) de The Curve of Time

2 Works 392 Membros 11 Críticas 1 Favorited

About the Author

Obras por M. Wylie Blanchet

The Curve of Time (1968) 381 exemplares
A Whale Named Henry (1983) 11 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome legal
Blanchet, Muriel Wylie Liffiton
Data de nascimento
1891-05-02
Data de falecimento
1961-09-09
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
Canada
Local de nascimento
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Local de falecimento
Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada
Locais de residência
Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Ocupações
travel writer
memoirist
Relações
Gilzean, Elizabeth (daugther)

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M. Wylie Blanchet was born Muriel Wylie Liffiton to a prosperous family in Montreal, Quebec. She and her sisters were tutored at home prior to attending St. Paul's, a private girls' school. Muriel was a prize-winning pupil and also made a name for herself as a rower. In 1909, at age 18, she married Geoffrey Orme Blanchet, a banker, with whom she had five children. They lived in Toronto for many years, until her husband took early retirement. In 1922, the family went west and moved into a cottage on Vancouver Island. They purchased an old 25-foot motor boat called Caprice. Five years later, Geoffrey Blanchet took the boat on a camping trip and disappeared; he was never seen again. Muriel educated her children at home and wrote articles for magazines. In summer, they rented out their house and took long trips on the Caprice. As they sailed the coastal waters between Vancouver Island and the mainland of British Columbia, they followed the logbooks and voyages of George Vancouver, the 18th century explorer who was one of the first European visitors to the area. They anchoring in secluded coves to walk through the wilderness, examine the architecture and burial grounds of deserted native villages, and see various animals of the region, including whales, cougars and bears. Muriel's 1961 book, The Curve of Time, documented these travels. A story she wrote for her children in the 1930s was published posthumously as A Whale Named Henry (1982).

Membros

Críticas

Around a hundred years ago, a widowed woman and her five children spent 15 summers on a small boat cruising the coast of British Columbia. This memoir describes their adventures and places they visited with lots of details about biology, geology, and the history of the area. There is very little info about the family itself, which I found refreshing. If such a book was written today, the focus would be all on the author, and used for self-promotion.

It is so fascinating especially because the parts Blanchet traveled with her children are still very wild and were even more desolate at that time. There is a particular type of person who can thrive in such an environment. I always admired those who had the courage to explore the frontier, moreover with five young children in tow. This is not the old trope of a man against the wilderness; Blanchet and her children are a part of the landscape. She was such an extraordinary woman and it is remarkable how she raised her children with such passion for nature and exploration.

I particularly loved the descriptions of the people they met during their summers. It reminded me of a real-life Northern Exposure. A nostalgic look into another era, a lot more authentic and wholesome. A truly great book.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
ZeljanaMaricFerli | 10 outras críticas | Mar 4, 2024 |
rabck from Vasha; a wonderful find when I finally picked it up to read it. Because of the age of the copy, I tried to get another copy - and that's when I found out how obscure and expensive a copy of this could be! Hoopla this month added an audio copy, so I listened to that some of the time to save wear and tear on the train on the book. The story about Henry the Whale is delightful & I actually copied it to take to my granddaughters, hoping that we can transcribe and illustrate it into our own book. Little is listening on wikipedia for the author, but a decent family written bio is here: http://www.dbsparks.com/MurielLiffiton.pdf… (mais)
½
1 vote
Assinalado
nancynova | 10 outras críticas | Nov 11, 2019 |
This is what we did on our summer vacation? This reads more like a blog than a book. It would be more interesting if I knew the author, but she tries hard to keep the writing matter-of-fact and impersonal. Some of the writing is still good.
1 vote
Assinalado
breic | 10 outras críticas | Oct 18, 2019 |
Put a mother, five children, and a dog in a twenty-five foot motorboat to cruise the British Columbia coastline for four summer months before having to return home before onslaught of the bad weather in fall. They got to know some of the homesteaders that lived in the various inlets, explored First Nations winter villages, searched for a seahorse one of the children was sure they saw, had close calls with bears, and visited the inlet where Henry the Orca had gotten stuck in because he hadn't listened to his mother. Of course, there were also the times when they were sheltering in a cove off Mistaken Island and Capi was working the fore and aft anchors to keep the Caprice with just enough water under her keel to keep her from grounding or up an Lewis Channel when the engine died and Capi had to tow the boat with the dingy five miles to so she could anchor Caprice before working on the engine.
Fishing for dinner, the food they'd stored aboard, traded or bought along their way. They were a family that adventured together both afloat and ashore
… (mais)
1 vote
Assinalado
lisa.schureman | 10 outras críticas | May 17, 2018 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
2
Membros
392
Popularidade
#61,822
Avaliação
4.2
Críticas
11
ISBN
12
Marcado como favorito
1

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