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Crossings: A novel

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Crossings

284 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1979

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87 people want to read

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5 stars
10 (21%)
4 stars
18 (39%)
3 stars
13 (28%)
2 stars
3 (6%)
1 star
2 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Leo.
5,030 reviews637 followers
June 8, 2021
Written in 1979 I think this books is highly underrated. Set in the early 60's in Vancouver this follows Vic who is in relationship with Mic. But it's far from happy as its often gets physical. Not an easy book to listen to but good nevertheless.
Profile Image for Anakana Schofield.
Author 6 books135 followers
May 1, 2012
Crossings is a startling and brilliant novel. It has recently been republished under the Vancouver 125 Legacy Books initiative. The novel starkly (and sometimes uncomfortably) examines the unremitting nature of demented, violent relationships. Betty Lambert (who also wrote 74 plays) was unrelenting in tackling the difficult material that she could easily have shied from. Crossings uncomfortably digs into holes we'd probably rather not look. (Mick is a shuddering creation.) Even the opening of the novel acknowledges something rarely acknowledged in Vancouver fiction: the sense of the city existing beyond merely its cartography. That its workers, especially seasonal, have historically gone out to the bush, to fish, to log and returned to the city.

"'You can't destroy me,' he had said 'I've been destroyed by the experts.'"
Profile Image for Charlene.
49 reviews
September 29, 2014
Jumps around a lot, yet so well crafted that it is still a good book. When you consider when it was written, you realize that for its time it was a masterpiece. Newly re- released ladies who came of age in the time period of this book will probably appreciate the cultural nuances better than younger generations. Still, it is worth reading... Explores issues of spousal abuse, rape, self destructive behavior.
Profile Image for sophia the first.
132 reviews11 followers
September 1, 2024
I heard it was an interesting look at a feminist perspective. It was a big deal because the author was a feminist in real life, but her book was from the POV of an abused woman, so the critics were like OMG you’re totally not a feminist. It’s a slog to get through, but once you’re done it’s interesting to think about. Like Of Mice and Men or books like that. It’s graphic and confusing. The writing style seemed like the narrator was just spewing consciousness, which made her seem more human.
This is one of those books you can’t really rate, it’s a horrid reading experience but leaves you more educated and with thoughts.
Profile Image for Naomi McCormick.
44 reviews3 followers
February 11, 2013
I picked this book because it's set in vancouver and the gulf islands and i was intrigued by the author's own life. the writing is fair to good. it's a bit messy and non-linear but this makes sense in the context of the character. it's refreshingly unflinching when it comes to describing a woman who subverts herself to a drunk man.that said, it got put down mid-read when something i was more interested in came along. i will pick it up again, but that says something about the quality of the work i suppose.
4 reviews3 followers
May 26, 2012
Nice to see this book reissued in 2012. It's a gritty portrait of BC in the '70s from the perspective of a would-be writer whose relationships are more than complicated. It stands up to the test of time.
Profile Image for Lester.
1,644 reviews
May 18, 2017
Very strange and will read again!!!
2,459 reviews
August 20, 2020
Great writing by this Canadian author who reviews two options on the narrow list for women in the 1970's.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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