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An Acre of Time: The Enduring Value of Place

di Phil Jenkins

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Winner of the Ottawa Citizen Award for Non-Fiction Winner of the Canadian Authors Association Lela Common Award for Non-Fiction Shortlisted for the Edna Staebler Award for Creative Nonfiction Where is here? That question, Northrop Frye believed, was the key to Canadian identity, the secret of our collective psyche. For Phil Jenkins, "here" is a single acre of land on LeBreton Flats in the nation’s capital, Ottawa. In this strikingly inventive book, he stakes that acre and recounts the story of its life. He rides a glass elevator up from the earth’s core, describing the geological strata he passes through before reaching the surface. He watches the land submerge beneath salt water that rises as high as the tallest Ottawa skyscraper, a place where 10,000 years ago beluga whales cavorted. He climbs a pine tree and sees Samuel de Champlain paddle up the Ottawa River, intent on converting the native Algonquins and claiming the acre for France. He walks down Duke Street in the early nineteen hundreds and reports on the desolate acre of today, studying its endangered flora, fauna and future. The acre was part of the land expropriated by the National Capital Commission in the 1960s. Buildings were bulldozed, lives transplanted, and a huge government complex was envisioned. The Pope held a mass on the site in 1984, but to this day nothing has been built. The acre may eventually be included in a native land settlement; for the moment it serves as home to a group of street kids and as an overnight parking lot for tour buses. An Acre of Timeis about the way land becomes territory, territory becomes property, and property becomes real estate. It’s about the process by which man alters the place he inhabits. By taking a single acre of Canada and examining it in unexpected ways, Jenkins has produced a highly original celebration of place, a book at once eclectic, invaluable, and unique.… (altro)
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Phil Jenkins, a resident of the greater Ottawa area, selects an acre of land along the Ottawa River and tells its story, from the earliest days of the planet to the present. Along the way, he talks about Indigenous groups, settlers from Europe, land squabbles, resource plundering, and the growth of the community we know today as Ottawa.

This is an interesting idea for a book, although strangely enough there wasn’t actually a map of the acre in question in the book! At least not that I could find. It took me about 80 to 100 pages to be really confident I knew how many of my landmarks were covered by the acre, and even now I’m still not 100% certain. That kept bugging me and ultimately led me to abandon the book without finishing it. But the book itself was well written, and as I said I liked the idea, so with a map it would have been four stars. ( )
  rabbitprincess | Sep 24, 2019 |
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Winner of the Ottawa Citizen Award for Non-Fiction Winner of the Canadian Authors Association Lela Common Award for Non-Fiction Shortlisted for the Edna Staebler Award for Creative Nonfiction Where is here? That question, Northrop Frye believed, was the key to Canadian identity, the secret of our collective psyche. For Phil Jenkins, "here" is a single acre of land on LeBreton Flats in the nation’s capital, Ottawa. In this strikingly inventive book, he stakes that acre and recounts the story of its life. He rides a glass elevator up from the earth’s core, describing the geological strata he passes through before reaching the surface. He watches the land submerge beneath salt water that rises as high as the tallest Ottawa skyscraper, a place where 10,000 years ago beluga whales cavorted. He climbs a pine tree and sees Samuel de Champlain paddle up the Ottawa River, intent on converting the native Algonquins and claiming the acre for France. He walks down Duke Street in the early nineteen hundreds and reports on the desolate acre of today, studying its endangered flora, fauna and future. The acre was part of the land expropriated by the National Capital Commission in the 1960s. Buildings were bulldozed, lives transplanted, and a huge government complex was envisioned. The Pope held a mass on the site in 1984, but to this day nothing has been built. The acre may eventually be included in a native land settlement; for the moment it serves as home to a group of street kids and as an overnight parking lot for tour buses. An Acre of Timeis about the way land becomes territory, territory becomes property, and property becomes real estate. It’s about the process by which man alters the place he inhabits. By taking a single acre of Canada and examining it in unexpected ways, Jenkins has produced a highly original celebration of place, a book at once eclectic, invaluable, and unique.

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