• Announcing Anne’s World

    Posted on 2 November 2009 Benjamin No comments

    Announcing Anne’s World: A New Century of Anne of Green Gables, a collection of essays edited by Irene Gammel and Benjamin Lefebvre, to be published by University of Toronto Press in Spring-Summer 2010.

  • The Blythes Are Quoted Now Available

    Posted on 22 October 2009 Benjamin 4 comments

    The Blythes Are Quoted

    I’m pleased to announce that my edition of L.M. Montgomery’s rediscovered last book, The Blythes Are Quoted, is now available from Viking Canada.

    UPDATED 24 OCTOBER: For more on this book, see the following links:

    Waterloo-based academic finds L.M. Montgomery’s last ‘darker’ work” (Kitchener-Waterloo Record, 24 October 2009)

    A different Anne and Gilbert” (The Globe and Mail, 23 October 2009)

    Green Gables tale darkens in final book” (CBC News, 23 October 2009)

    UPDATED 26 OCTOBER: See also my essay “The Dark Side of L.M. Montgomery,” published in The Mark.

    The short story “Some Fools and a Saint” is now available for download from Penguin Canada’s website.

    UPDATED 20 NOVEMBER:The Dark Side of L.M. Montgomery” now includes a podcast of me reading extracts from Anne of Windy Willows.

  • Announcement: The Blythes Are Quoted

    Posted on 8 April 2009 Benjamin 4 comments

    I’m pleased to announce that my edition of L.M. Montgomery’s rediscovered final novel, The Blythes Are Quoted, will be published by Penguin Canada in 2009:

    The Blythes Are Quoted

    By L.M. Montgomery
    Edited by Benjamin Lefebvre
    With a foreword by Elizabeth Rollins Epperly
    Toronto: Penguin Canada, forthcoming 1 October 2009

    The never-before-published complete and unabridged last work of L.M. Montgomery

    Adultery, illegitimacy, misogyny, revenge, murder, despair, bitterness, hatred, and death—usually not the first terms associated with L.M. Montgomery. But in The Blythes Are Quoted, completed shortly before her death and never before published in its entirety, Montgomery brought these topics to the forefront in what she intended to be the ninth volume in her bestselling series featuring the beloved heroine Anne. Divided into two sections, one set before and one after the Great War of 1914-1918, The Blythes Are Quoted contains fifteen short stories that include an adult Anne and her family. Between these short stories Montgomery inserted sketches featuring Anne and Gilbert Blythe discussing poems by Anne and their middle son, Walter, who dies as a soldier in the war. By blending together poetry, prose, and dialogue, Montgomery was experimenting with storytelling methods in ways she had never attempted before. The Blythes Are Quoted marks L.M. Montgomery’s final contribution to a body of work that continues to fascinate readers all over the world.

  • Two New Publications

    Posted on 8 April 2009 Benjamin No comments

    Last week I received copies of two new publications. The first is a new edition of L.M. Montgomery’s novel A Tangled Web (1931), published by Dundurn Press, for which I wrote a new introduction. The second is an article titled “Agency, Belonging, Citizenship: The ABCs of Nation-Building in Contemporary Canadian Texts for Adolescents,” published in the Autumn 2008 issue of Canadian Literature. It is an expansion of a paper I first gave at the International Symposium on Adolescent Literature at Ningbo University (China) in May 2007. Here is the abstract:

    Abstract: This paper pinpoints the ways in which discourses of agency, belonging, and citizenship are staged in a handful of Canadian texts for adolescents published in the last twenty-five years: Beatrice Culleton’s April Raintree (1984), Marlene Nourbese Philip’s Harriet’s Daughter (1988), Deborah Ellis’s Parvana’s Journey (2002), Glen Huser’s Stitches (2003), and Martine Leavitt’s Heck Superhero (2004). These novels depict young people who are marginalized due to oppressive discourses such as racism, patriarchy, homophobia, poverty, and the dissolution of the nuclear family, and thus lack the support systems of the status quo. At the same time, they appear to broach larger questions about the construction of the Canadian nation alongside the story of a central protagonist’s growth from relative immaturity to relative maturity. Undercutting the dominant fantasy of a liberal and diverse nation-state, these narratives refuse to resolve or settle oppressive discourses that conflict with official policies of multiculturalism, keeping the ideal nation in sight but out of reach.

  • New Edition of A Tangled Web

    Posted on 20 January 2009 Benjamin No comments
    9781554884032

    Cover art for A Tangled Web (2009)

    A new edition of L.M. Montgomery’s 1931 novel A Tangled Web will be published with my introduction by Dundurn Press, as part of their Voyageur Classics: Books that Explore Canada series. Click here for the publisher listing.

    The book, scheduled to be published on 30 March 2009, is available to pre-order on Amazon.ca, Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk, and Chapters.Indigo.ca.