The Lord Nelson Tavern: a Halifax watering hole in the early 1960s.
The group of young university students who hang out there--a ramshackle
coterie of aspiring artists, economists, poets, and philosophers--come
together to gossip and ponder the big questions of art and life, all the
while pining after the vain and untouchable Francesca.
Though these friends soon drift apart, their early rivalries, jealousies
and conquests will continue to reverberate. In the novel's seven
interlocking sequences, Ray Smith explores the often decisive and even
fatal impact of seemingly innocuous choices upon the course of our
lives. With unforgettable scenes that marry the sacred and the profane,
and with structural innovations that recall the works of Barthelme and
Nabokov, Lord Nelson Tavern is a must-read cult-classic of Canadian
fiction.