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A Fair Country
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About the Author

John Ralston Saul's philosophical trilogy - Voltaire's Bastards, The Doubter's Companion and The Unconscious Civilization - has had a growing impact on political thought in many countries. A further work, On Equilibrium, is a persuasive and groundbreaking exploration of the human struggle for personal and social balance. Mr. Saul has written five novels, including The Birds of Prey and The Field Trilogy. These works deal with the crisis of modern power and its clash with the individual. Like his non-fiction, his novels have been translated into many languages. He has received many national and international awards for his work. The Unconscious Civilization won the 1996 Governor General's Literary Award for Non-Fiction as well as the Gordon Montador Award for Best Canadian Book on Social Issues. His reinterpretation of the nature of Canada , Reflections of a Siamese Twin, also won a Montador Award and was chosen by Macfean's magazine as one of the ten best non-fiction books of the twentieth century. His novel The Paradise Eater won the Premio Lettarario Internazionate in Italy.

Reviews

SHORTLISTED FOR 2009 CBA LIBRIS AWARDS—NON-FICTION

“[A] brilliant and timely argument about Canada’s complex nature and our country’s best future course. What a relief it is to read something so observant about Canada. . . . we are a Métis nation, certainly, and it has never been so eloquently said.” —The Globe and Mail

“Gutsy and exciting. . . . A Fair Country has the potential to change the way Canadians see themselves forever. It offers a romantic and heroic vision, and it’s a stirring and unpretentious read.” —Winnipeg Free Press

“There’s something admirable, possibly even heroic, in the earnest anger of John Ralston Saul as he bangs away at the theme of his book A Fair Country.” —National Post

“[A Fair Country is] that rare work of political thought that, by virtue of its daring, is both thrilling and sobering. One reads it with the even rarer sense that it had to be written.” —The Gazette (Montreal)

“Any Canadian reading the book, or learning about its content, will think of Canada differently.” —Toronto Star

“A stinging assessment of public- and private-sector leaders paralyzed by a ‘colonial inferiority complex.’” —Edmonton Journal

“An excellent first step to recovery. By seriously examining Aboriginal influences in Canadian history, Saul goes some way to curing the ongoing dysfunction suffered by—not Aboriginal Canadians—but by mainstream Canadians. . . . A consequence of Saul’s vision is that Western Canada assumes greater influence in the Canadian story. . . . Makes a lot of sense.” —Calgary Herald
 
“Always challenging . . . [A Fair Country] is a new and much needed foundation for a profoundly new (multi-) national self-definition.” —Now (Toronto)
 
“Anyone who is the least bit curious about Canadian identity will find A Fair Country a fascinating text. Saul goes to the heart of the matter and demonstrates how Aboriginal inspiration has defined us as a unique people whose roots are both European and Native.” —Hour (Montreal)

“An intellectually engaging effort to reframe our view of the relationship between Aboriginal peoples and Canadians who have arrived (or been born to migrants) over the past four centuries. . . . Maybe—maybe—Saul has begun the dialogue that will create a powerful new national narrative(the Greeks called it mythos) to reframe this relationship from one of ignorance and racism to that of equality and respect.” —Michael Adams, author of Fire and Ice: The United States, Canada and the Myth of Converging Values
 
 “Combative, provocative and stimulating.” —Quill & Quire
 
 “From the cover illustration that refers to the Anishnabeck world view of Turtle Island to the notion of the all-inclusive circle as opposed to the Anglo/Franco/European linear view, Saul challenges us to re-examine our history as it applies to our contemporary world view, our contemporary lives and our future.” —Inverness Oran (Inverness, Nova Scotia)
 
“[A Fair Country] shines light on the failings of our national capital and the people who live there.” —Ottawa Citizen

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