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1.The Earth in the Balance - Healing the Global Environment by Al Gore
2.The Greatest Story Ever Sold by Frank Rich

1.Catch Me If You Can by Donna Kauffman
2.Native Speaker by Chang-Rae Lee
3.The Book of Video Photography- A Handbook for the Amateur Movie-Maker by David F. Cheshire
4.Voyages of Delusion- The Quest for the Northwest Passage by Glyn Williams
 
 

The Navigator of New York- A Novel
Author: Wayne Johnston

Book Details:
ISBN: 0385507674
Binding: Hard Cover
Jacket Condition: New
Publisher: Doubleday
Publish Date: 2002
Description:
Wayne Johnston's breakthrough epic novel The Colony of Unrequited Dreams was published in several countries and given high praise from the critics. It earned him nominations for the highest fiction prizes in Canada and was a national bestseller. His American editor said he hadn't found such an exciting author since he discovered Don DeLillo. Johnston, who has been writing fiction for two decades, launched his next and sixth novel across the English-speaking world to great anticipation.

The Navigator of New York is set against the background of the tumultuous rivalry between Lieutenant Peary and Dr. Cook to get to the North Pole at the beginning of the 20th century. It is also the story of a young man's quest for his origins, from St. John's, Newfoundland, to the bustling streets of New York, and the remotest regions of the Arctic.

Devlin Stead's father, an Arctic explorer, stops returning home at the end of his voyages and announces he is moving to New York, as "New York is to explorers what Paris is to artists"; eventually he is declared missing from an expedition. His mother meets an untimely death by drowning shortly after. Young Devlin, who barely remembers either of them, lives contently in the care of his affectionate aunt and indifferent uncle, until taunts from a bullying fellow schoolboy reveal dark truths underlying the bare facts he knows about his family. A rhyme circulated around St. John's further isolates Devlin, always seen as an odd child who had inherited his parents' madness and would likely meet a similar fate.

Devlin, who has always learned about his father through newspaper reports, now finds other people's accounts of hisparents are continually altering his view of his parents. Then strange secret letters start to arrive, exciting his imagination with the unanticipated notion that his life might contain the possibility of adventure


 
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