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Jacques Ferron Critical Essay | Critical Essay by Ray Ellenwood

This literature criticism consists of approximately 12 pages of analysis & critique of Jacques Ferron.
This section contains 3,342 words
(approx. 12 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Jacques Ferron - Critical Essay by Ray Ellenwood

Critical Essay by Ray Ellenwood

SOURCE: "Death and Dr. Ferron," in Brick: A Journal of Reviews, No. 24, Spring, 1985, pp. 6-9.

In the essay below, Ellenwood discusses Ferron's treatment of death in his stories and novels.

He was obsessed with it; defied it and courted it virtually all his life. His mother died young of tuberculosis, his father committed suicide a few years later, he was tubercular himself and was sent to a sanitarium just after the war. Deciding he wasn't ready for a slow, passive demise, he went over the wall and continued working twenty hours a day, smoking like a chimney, conducting pharmacological experiments on himself, even trying, unsuccessfully, Mithridates' silken escape ladder until death finally caught him napping on the morning of April 22, 1985. Neveurmagne, he'll have the last word. No writer I'm aware of has ever said so much, so wisely, humorously, mordantly, compassionately about death.

In the tales,...
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This section contains 3,342 words
(approx. 12 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Jacques Ferron - Critical Essay by Ray Ellenwood
Copyrights
Jacques Ferron - Critical Essay by Ray Ellenwood from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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