Man Should Rejoice, by Hugh MacLennan

A Critical Edition

Hugh MacLennan author Colin Hill editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of Ottawa Press

Published:2nd Oct '19

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Man Should Rejoice, by Hugh MacLennan cover

Man Should Rejoice is one of two hitherto unpublished novels by acclaimed novelist Hugh MacLennan. Completed in 1937 and left unpublished due to economic conditions during the Great Depression, it lay in the McGill archives until now.

This critical edition of Man Should Rejoice , which is also the first-ever publication of the work, is comprised of a critical introduction, a bibliography of published and unpublished sources, a fully-edited text based on a typescript of the novel, a list of textual emendations, and explanatory notes.

The introduction draws upon extensive research undertaken in three Canadian archival collections located in Montreal and Calgary. It provides relevant historical, cultural, and biographical context for the novel.

From hundreds of archival documents, Colin Hill reconstructs a textual history of the novel’s production that acknowledges the crucial contribution of Dorothy Duncan, who heavily revised the text and assisted MacLennan behind the scenes. Hill also explores the critical reception of MacLennan’s fiction from the 1930s to the present.

Published in English.

Man Should Rejoice certainly deserves to be published at last, even though -- as its editor Colin Hill admits -- it "is not MacLennan's lost masterpiece".  It is nevertheless, a remarkable, compelling novel.  -- Faye Hammill

Hugh MacLennan’s early novel Man Should Rejoice (c. 1937) has finally found a publisher in the Canadian Literature Collection, a series edited by Dean Irvine for the University of Ottawa Press. It is eighty years late in appearing, but it makes an important addition to MacLennan’s oeuvre, offering insightful new perspectives on the beginnings of his writing career. Carefully edited by Colin Hill, it will force interested readers to rethink past assessments of a writer seen by many as the quintessential, somewhat predictable, Canadian realist.

-- Michael Peterman

ISBN: 9780776627991

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 386g

340 pages