"This is the journal of a consummate story teller. War, death, madness, fury, despair, sheer grit, laughter, love, and exquisitely realized beauty and joy: all are rendered through the eye and 'I' of an artist for whom her journal was not so much a place as an act of engaging-a companioning of and questioning of herself. I suggest that this volume, covering 1918 to 1921, is one of the most important works in Montgomery's entire writing career. Here we see her personal world shattered, and we see her consciously remaking it." -From the Introduction by Elizabeth Rollins Epperly
..". the production of Montgomery's Complete Journals now continues under the expert direction of Jen Rubio." --Carole Gerson, Literary Review of Canada
"Have you heard the news?" L.M. Montgomery records asking her husband Ewan as he arrived home on October 6, 1918, "hoping like a child that he hadn't, so that I would be the first to tell him." World War I had ended.
Montgomery's words reflect the relief felt across the world as the war drew to a close. Her own life, however, did not relax as she might have hoped; rather, a series of unexpected events were about to unfold.
Elizabeth Rollins Epperly observes in her introduction that Montgomery's journals are filled with moments of joy "suspended in a larger, often darker, story." Here we read about Montgomery's experiences with death, the spirit world, and insanity, among others. Her husband's mental illness often makes for hair-raising reading. Available here for the first time is the complete record of Montgomery's life, a spellbinding account of the small and the large, the tragic and the humorous.
Over 180 of Montgomery's own photographs are included, many never before published. In addition to Professor Epperly's fascinating introduction, this edition contains more than 400 notes providing a wealth of historical and literary background.
About the Author: Jen Rubio holds a Ph.D. in English literature from the University of Edinburgh. Rubio has taught a wide variety of post-secondary courses in Canadian literature and English literature, and was nominated for McMaster University's teaching award in 1992. She served as the academic advisory editor for Broadview Press and as managing editor in the trade division at Oxford University Press Canada. She lives in Hamilton, Ontario.