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Biography & Autobiography Literary

Characters Along the Road

by (author) Harry Bruce

Publisher
Pottersfield Press
Initial publish date
Sep 2024
Category
Literary, 20th Century, Atlantic Provinces (NB, NL, NS, PE), Personal Memoirs
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781990770616
    Publish Date
    Sep 2024
    List Price
    $21.95

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Description

Harry Bruce's newest book is a collection of stories from a career that spans nearly 70 years in journalism, interviewing some of the most interesting and influential figures from Canada's recent history. He recounts his encounters with millionaires, prime ministers, movers and shakers.

Characters Along the Road finds its stories in the blustery halls of Parliament and on the windswept shores of Nova Scotia. Bruce follows the powerful players who've shaped his nation, alongside the introspective artists and explorers who search Canada's shores for inspiration. What results is a slice of Canadian history from one of its most accomplished chroniclers. Bruce's collection is replete with insight into the country's political and publishing elite from John Diefenbaker to Joey Smallwood, but still finds time to reflect on family, friendship and the wisdom he's found in stranger corners across the country.

Harry Bruce's adventures are likely to induce nostalgia, pride and fury for Canadians old enough to remember the triumphs and injustices contained in Characters Along the Road and provide new insight for a generation of younger readers better trying to understand the Canada they've inherited. It's hard to believe one life could touch so many important moments in history, yet Harry Bruce made it his business to find those characters he met along the road, and to tell their stories to anybody who would listen.

About the author

Born and raised in Toronto, Harry Bruce has deep family and literary roots in Nova Scotia. Author of over twenty books and countless columns and articles in every major Canadian periodical, he was, successively, managing editor of Saturday Night, editor of The Canadian and columnist for The Star Weekly. He moved to Halifax as founding editor of Atlantic Insight, winner of the Outstanding Achievement Award of the National Magazine Awards Foundation. Respected worldwide as a writer, journalist and educator, in 2011 Harry Bruce received Atlantic Journalism's Lifetime Achievement Award. His book Lifeline earned the first Evelyn Richardson Memorial Literary Award for Non-Fiction. He continues to live in Halifax with his wife Penny, to whom he credits much of his success.

Harry Bruce's profile page

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