Last year we read our way around Nova Scotia and had such a good time, we thought we’d go again.
Apparently, living in Halifax does not make you immune to run-ins with vampires. In Once a Samurai by D.C. Rhind, Michael Cameron, a Martial Arts instructor, has trouble brewing in all aspects of his life. His loved ones are dying, his marriage has failed and he has lost his boat at sea. Following his travels in the far east, he returns to Halifax only to be asked to add vampire-slaying to his list of credentials. Although at first reluctant it becomes personal when he becomes a target.
Ok, enough with the vampires. Harbour View by Binnie Brennan is a touching novella, really more interconnected short stories, about the residents and staff in a nursing home in Halifax. Reading it brought to mind Hagar Shipley (in fact one of the residents would only choose The Diviners from the reading trolley as the rest of the novels were romances that she couldn’t relate to all at). Present and past are interwoven and sometimes confused by the residents. Old age plays terrible tricks, robbing people of their independence in the most basic functions of life. Staff and family who care to take the time to listen learn about their rich pasts. Some residents choose to alter or invent their past in order to either fit in or to wrap themselves in privacy, lending the stories a bittersweet quality. The novella opens with Neil-Duncan (Buddy) MacDonald on his 109th birthday coming to the understanding that his family traditions haven’t been lost but have been transmitted down to generations unknown to him.