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This and That: The Lost Stories of Emily Carr

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Once available and appreciated only by researchers, these stories remained buried in the British Columbia Archives until 2007. Finally, readers are given a new glimpse into Emily s life with this collection. Emily Carr began to write these stories in the last two years of her life. She wrote of the ... they are too small each to be taken singly, but each, complete in itself, serves to ornament life which would be a drab affair without the little things we do not even notice or think of at the time but which old age memory magnifies. This collection illuminates her life and is available to all in This and The Lost Stories of Emily Carr. Enter Emily s world with stories like Father s Temper, The First Snow and Smoking with the Cow stories in which she reveals details of her family life, school days, her fascination with nature, animals she loved and how she learned to smoke. The book is a delight. Carr comes to us full of personality and good cheer, setting down in the most direct way moments and memories which had stayed with her all her life. Victoria Times Colonist

206 pages, Paperback

First published September 15, 2007

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Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
969 reviews37 followers
November 26, 2018
I thought I'd read all of Emily Carr's books, so I was pleased to find this one when we visited Victoria earlier this year (thanks to Ralf hosting AERC at U Vic). Tom got me an art book of her paintings, and i bought myself this book of her shorter writings about bits and pieces of her life.

Her art work is amazing, and if you've never seen it, go look it up (or go see it in a museum, if you have the opportunity). But I love her writing every bit as much, whether *The Book of Small* or *The House of All Sorts* or this one (all of it autobiographical). Perhaps because I just read them as I neared the end of the book, the pieces in this collection that stand out for me include: "The Round World," "Beckley Street," and "Hoarding for Old Age." Of course, many of the earlier ones about her childhood are wonderful, as she seems to have been herself, different and rebellious, from an early age. Highly recommended!

Profile Image for Greta.
1,004 reviews5 followers
November 3, 2022
Emily Carr has a lovely way of describing the world she grew up with in the collection of unpublished vignettes of the book, This and That. These short stories read like a diary of her growing up experiences in Victoria, BC, Canada. We toured her family home which is where most of these stories took place. Her art is displayed separately in many museums around the world.
Profile Image for Danielle.
21 reviews
November 17, 2023
Happened to pick this up while a patient at the hospital she wrote it in. Pretty great.
506 reviews2 followers
November 23, 2025
Wonderfully atmospheric snippets of her own childhood and observations of places and people in her travels.
Profile Image for Sirpa Grierson.
455 reviews35 followers
December 13, 2012
While these stories were not all completed to Carr's satisfaction before her death, for anyone who wants to know more about this artistic soul who was not only brilliant, fiercely independent, and talented, but was also one of a handful of modern women artists, these stories are a fabulous find. Emily Carr was one of my favorite painters as an art major in the early 1970s. I even completed a project on her at that time for my amazing professor, the Canadian painter, Gordon A. Smith. Carr was introduced to me by Professor Smoth as a part of the Canadian Group of Seven. She was an acquaintance of Georgia O'Keefe's, and equal to her in vision as well as to Frida Kahlo. Currently Emily Carr's work is on exhibit at Germany's prestigious Documenta art show.

While I love her artwork, much of which documents the coastal landscapes and First Nations life in turn of the century British Columbia, Canada, my heart is most attracted to her stories. The Book of Small, Klee Wyck, and many others are gems of storytelling from a very original voice. Ms. Carr won the Governor General's award for Klee Wyck in about 1941. Her books are some of my most cherished reads and I am so thrilled to have rediscovered her work in this latest work as well as in the recent independent film, "Carr, O'Keefe, and Kahlo: Places of their Own."
Profile Image for Bonnie.
1,466 reviews
March 1, 2013
This book is at the BAPL in memory of my nephew who passed away last May. I left it up to the library which book by Emily Carr to purchase. These are really short essays, some very sweet, some sad, I love the old fashioned language she uses. In the back of the book is a chronological list of dates and important happenings in her life which I think is a good idea in any type of memoir.
I also have the very large book of the complete writings of Emily Carr but this little book isn't included. Some of the books in that big one are better than this little book but I still enjoyed reading these essays. I'm fascinated with Emily Carr, she was her own woman, thankfully she had the strength to do what she wanted to do even though her family did not support her art or her independence, she was definitely way ahead of her time.
Profile Image for Patricia.
627 reviews10 followers
March 26, 2013
I’m trying to cut down on the books that I buy, read once then have to find a place for in my increasingly stuffed to the rafter’s home. At my local library I found and read twice this volume of delightful vignettes. It pained me to not underline the many delightful metaphors….and to return it in pristine condition. I’m trusting the local library to take good care of it and the many others I will entrust to them as I begin to donate my precious finds to them.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
187 reviews10 followers
August 7, 2014
Insight into another time and place, which I just visited (Victoria, BC), but I was mostly bored.
Profile Image for M.j. Radosevich.
96 reviews5 followers
June 5, 2015
Delightful missives. The author has a charming way to draw the reader into the extra ordinary in her daily.
11 reviews
November 17, 2012
Lovely book of short stories. There are a couple that I go back to and read often.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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