In the Village of Viger
Duncan Campbell Scott
Read by Lee Smalley
These ten superb short stories of Duncan Campbell Scott, published in 1896, portray humorous, farcical, and tragic aspects of life in the fictional Quebec village of Viger. Scott’s tales of the lives and vicissitudes of Viger’s inhabitants include an established milliner who is upset by the appearance of a younger, more popular rival; an innkeeper whose obsession with the Franco-Prussian War drives him mad; and a strange peddler with a carefully guarded secret that is accidentally revealed.
Duncan Campbell Scott was born in Ottawa, Ontario, in 1862. He entered the civil service in 1879 and remained until his retirement in 1932. Scott was an honored, skilled and popular poet, short-story writer, and essayist. He died in Ottawa in 1947.
For more information see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duncan_Campbell_Scott. (Lee Smalley) (2 hr 47 min)
Chapters
The Little Milliner | 23:33 | Read by Lee Smalley |
The Desjardins | 12:16 | Read by Lee Smalley |
The Wooing of Monsieur Courrier | 16:53 | Read by Lee Smalley |
Sedan | 17:06 | Read by Lee Smalley |
No. 68 Rue Alfred de Musset | 19:49 | Read by Lee Smalley |
The Bobolink | 8:34 | Read by Lee Smalley |
The Tragedy of the Seigniory | 22:02 | Read by Lee Smalley |
Josephine Labrosse | 15:59 | Read by Lee Smalley |
The Pedler | 8:36 | Read by Lee Smalley |
Paul Farlotte | 22:49 | Read by Lee Smalley |