There were other sources that helped shape the story as it developed, far too many to list. But I want to acknowledge in particular
The Dictionary of Newfoundland English
, which was an indispensable resource, and
The Newfoundland Journal of Aaron Thomas, 1794
, which I pilfered from freely.
Many people commented on earlier versions of
River Thieves
and I can’t think of one who didn’t contribute something that now feels essential to the book.
My agent, Anne McDermid, has been a tireless source of support, encouragement and advice, from first vague notions to final draft. Other friends read the book at varying stages and I’d like to thank (in chronological order) Helen Humphreys, Janice McAlpine, Marney McDiarmid and Mary Lewis.
I’m also grateful for the insight and editorial acumen of John Pearce at Doubleday and Anton Mueller at Houghton Mifflin. The novel would have been something different, and lesser, without their suggestions and questions.
Martha Kanya-Forstner has been both editor and, for lack of a better phrase, guardian angel of the novel at Doubleday. It’s her reading of
River Thieves
, more than any other but my own, that I’ve trusted in most.
Thanks to the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council for being there.
The aboriginal inhabitants of Newfoundland, a race of hunter/gatherers we know as the Beothuk, occupied or made use of most of the island’s coast before the arrival of Europeans in the 1500s. While there is no way to place it with any certainty, anthropologists using a variety of measures now estimate the pre-contact population at somewhere between 500 and 5,000 people.
Before the second half of the 17th century, European settlement was concentrated on the Avalon Peninsula. Contact between the Beothuk and Europeans was consequently limited, although records suggest relations were precarious and often involved mistrust, pilfering and violence. With the spread of British and French communities throughout the island’s coastline, the Beothuk lost access to much of their traditional territory. A combination of violence, exposure to diseases such as tuberculosis, and loss of coastal resources essential to their survival, decimated the Indian population. By the last half of the 18th century, the surviving Beothuk were confined to Red Indian Lake, the River Exploits and its watershed, and parts of the coast and islands of Notre Dame Bay on the northeast shore of Newfoundland.
The last known Beothuk died in St. John’s in 1829. As
Ingeborg Marshall writes, “Some individuals may have continued to lead a sequestered existence [afterwards], but as a cultural group the Beothuk had vanished.”
Michael Crummey is the author of four books of poetry:
Arguments with Gravity, Hard Light, Emergency Roadside Assistance
, and
Salvage;
and a collection of short stories,
Flesh and Blood.
He is a winner of the Bronwen Wallace Award and was nominated for the 1998 Journey Prize.
River Thieves
was shortlisted for the 2001 Giller Prize and the 2002 Commonwealth Writer’s Prize. Born in Buchans, Newfoundland, growing up there and in Wabush, Labrador, Michael Crummey now lives in St. John’s.
Copyright © Michael Crummey 2001
Doubleday Canada hardcover edition 2001
Anchor Canada paperback edition 2002
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National Library of Canada Cataloguing in Publication Data
Crummey, Michael
River thieves
eISBN: 978-0-307-37488-2
I. Title.
PS
8555.R84
R
58 2002
C
813’.54
C
2002-900516-7
PR
9199.3.
C
717R58 2002
Map: CS Richardson (adapted from map of the Diocese of
Newfoundland, 1839)
Published in Canada by
Anchor Canada, a division of
Random House of Canada Limited
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