The Swing in the Garden

The Swing in the Garden, first published in 1975 by Oberon, is the fifth novel by Canadian author Hugh Hood and the first in his ambitious 12-novel cycle, The New Age.

The Swing in the Garden
First edition
AuthorHugh Hood
Cover artistLouis de Niverville
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish
SeriesThe New Age series
PublisherOberon Press
Publication date
1975
Media typePrint
Pages326 pages
Followed byA New Athens 

Plot and setting

This first book in the New Age series deals with narrator Matt Goderich's childhood and formative years growing up in Toronto and Jackson's Point, Ontario in the 1930s. The family lives in the idyllic Summerville neighborhood until his father Andrew, a confirmed socialist, loses his job as a university professor for political reasons. Andrew Goderich then purchases the Lazy Bay Grill in Jackson's Point and the family runs this business for some time, eventually running out of money because they are overstaffed and are too kind to let anyone go. Later they manage a ramshackle hotel, the Lakeview, on the Toronto Islands.

Themes

Hood's observational style and attention to detail bring to life a 1930s Ontario in the midst of dramatic social change. Canada is slowly growing away from the United Kingdom and developing ever-closer ties with the United States. In Toronto, strongly felt class structures divide neighborhoods hard-hit by the Depression, while in the surrounding area, pristine forest is turned into cottage country for the increasingly wealthy Toronto elites. As the clouds of World War II loom on the horizon, the narrator and Canada itself both struggle through growing pains in their search for an identity.

gollark: According to random internet articles per-person spending is twice as large as in basically every other country ever still.
gollark: I think a more plausible explanation is along the lines that there's a lot of indirection - people don't *directly* pay the full very large price - and, due to other things (devaluing of the degrees, making *not* having one a stronger signal of problematicness somehow, and bizarre "prestige" factors), many people can't really just go "hmm, no, I don't want to pay that much" so they go up.
gollark: It says something like 40% don't actually bill students, too...
gollark: It says they cost a lot, *not* the actual fraction of budgets these things cost.
gollark: This is mostly irrelevant.
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