The Affable Stranger - Couverture souple

McArthur, Peter

 
9788028341541: The Affable Stranger

Synopsis

The Affable Stranger gathers Peter McArthur's characteristic familiar essays: genial, observant pieces in which rural life, books, neighbours, weather, work, and conversation become occasions for moral reflection and quiet comedy. Written in a lucid, conversational prose, the volume belongs to the early twentieth-century tradition of the personal essay, yet it is distinctly Canadian in its attention to farm experience, local speech, and the dignity of ordinary days. McArthur, born in Ontario in 1866, was a journalist, editor, poet, and essayist whose career moved between metropolitan literary culture and the practical realities of farming. That double perspective shaped his work: he brought wide reading and urbane wit to the countryside, while resisting both sentimental pastoralism and modern haste. His "affable stranger" stance suggests the writer as companionable outsider, discovering wisdom through attentive acquaintance. This book is recommended to readers who value reflective prose, humane humour, and literary craftsmanship without pretension. Scholars of Canadian literature will find it a revealing example of national essay-writing before modernism; general readers will find a thoughtful, warm-spirited guide to the enduring meanings of place, fellowship, and everyday observation.

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