Broad Is the Way: Stories from Mayerthorpe

Margaret Norquay
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Broad Is the Way: Stories from Mayerthorpe

Margaret Norquay
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Found in: Biography, General Biography

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Overview

120 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Apr 10, 2008
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 120
  • Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
  • ISBN: 9781554580200
  • Dimensions: 6.01" W x 0.3" L x 9.03" H
A lifelong pioneer, Margaret Norquay has always been involved in community development, first with Farm Radio Forum and then with the Canadian army, where she served as a welfare officer. Postwar, in Dunnville, she was the first woman in Ontario to be appointed a community recreation director. Her marriage took her to Mayerthorpe, Alberta, as a minister’s wife and community volunteer. Later she wrote documentaries for CBC’s Take Thirty and became the director of studies for Open College, Ryerson.
Reading...memoirs of mid-century working lives [such as] Margaret Norquay's leads to a first conclusion: what happened to people like this? It is a cliché that our culture with its steady diet of celebrity vanity fails to notice quiet lives of service and integrity.... [M]eeting [her] if only in print, is refreshing and welcome.... Norquay's gift is her lack of sentimentality.... Hers is not a personal book, rarely touching on what might be the difficulties of raising four children; instead, she relates memories of starting a lending library, sitting on community boards, dealing with her husband's head injury, and organizing a children's camp. These bracing tales are told by a woman who looks back on her life with little sense of self-importance and a good deal of humour. - Kathryn Carter, Canadian Literature, 207, Winter 2010, 2011 August

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