Widely acclaimed for his magical weaving of fact and fiction, his masterful plotting and his gift for both description and character, Wayne Johnston's many novels include The Custodian of Paradise, The Navigator of New York and The Colony of Unrequited Dreams, which was a finalist for sixteen Canadian and international awards, including the Scotiabank Giller Prize and the Governor General's Literary Award for Fiction, and which won the New York Public Libraries Prize for Best Novel and was chosen by the Los Angeles Times as one of the Ten Best Books of the year. Baltimore's Mansion, a memoir about his father and grandfather, won the inaugural Charles Taylor Prize for literary nonfiction.
**Winner of the Stephen Leacocock Memorial Award for Humor**
"While the book’s most apt comparison is likely Frank McCourt’s
story of his Irish childhood in Limerick, “Angela’s Ashes,”
“Jennie’s Boy” is, if anything, even more powerful: a
compressed, restrained account of a life lived on the edge, not
only in poverty, but at the cusp of mortality. A simple fishing
trip, for example, becomes a near-tragic event, a life-shaping
incident depicted with an emotional directness. Never overblown or
sentimental, “Jennie’s Boy” is as vivid as one’s own memories, a
glimpse into a past of pain and wonder, of loss and joy." — Toronto
Star
"Beautifully written, Jennie's Boy is an excellent example of
narrative nonfiction that captures the reader's attention and
doesn't let go until the book's apposite ending." — Booklist
(starred review)
"Johnston recounts his childhood with affection and humor. Happily,
and somewhat miraculously, he grew up to be a healthy adult. A
tender memoir." — Kirkus Reviews
“Jennie’s Boy is a warm memoir that recalls a childhood year filled
with difficulties, but also a family’s love.” — Foreword
Reviews
"All I have ever done," Wayne Johnston writes in Jennie's Boy, his
account of growing up dirt-poor in Newfoundland, "is repeat what I
was told." Be grateful for that: the result is a story so vibrant
and detailed you don't read it so much as you race along and relive
it, blow by staggering blow. The man is incapable of writing a dull
sentence. The Johnstons of Newfoundland are poorer than Steinbeck's
Joads, funnier than the McCourts of Angela's Ashes, and every bit
as worthy as material. Which makes sense: there was no place on
earth quite like bottomed-out Newfoundland, and there is no better
book about it than this one. A brilliant and unforgettable story
told by one of the masters of Canadian literature. — Ian Brown
“I have been a Wayne Johnston fan since my teens. His books are the
ones that showed me that my own backyard was worth writing about.
In Jennie’s Boy, a glorious tale of bedmobiles and jug baths drawn
from his own life, he showed me what was behind closed doors just
up the road from me. Like the best Newfoundland storytellers do, he
made me laugh and then pause to think of how we can find love and
joy in a most untraditional childhood.” — Alan Doyle
“Wayne Johnston’s childhood in Newfoundland was full of laughter,
pain and poverty. And then laughter again. His memoir, Jennie’s
Boy, is an uplifting account of a childhood not just survived—he
came close to death too many times to count—but triumphed over.
Thank god he lived to tell the tale.” — Rick Mercer
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |