© David Arnault - 2018
Dog Tales
DOG-EARED INDEPENDENT
IMPRESSIONS provides
typesetting, design and editing
services, and assistance with
printing for independent writers
of fiction, non-fiction and poetry.
The following titles, by Arcadien
writer j.e. arseneault have
benefitted from dog-eared’s
attention and are available in e-
book form on Amazon, or by
contacting the publisher directly
and requesting a PDF.
The Prophesies of Isaiah
(An Acadien Story)
A madness engulfs the Republic after 9/11,
eventually swallowing it, digesting it, and in
time fertilising the soil with its foul waste. The
almost predictable result is a fascist state, the
tools of its oppression being religious
fanaticism, violence and the lust for power that
curdles reason and makes heavier the hand of
tyranny. The armies of the Republic invade
Nova Scotia and reduce the local population to
slaves. Still the Republic needs more land and
the armies move to Cape Breton; but it is there
that one woman defies them. One woman and
the man who falls in love with her. This is an
epic tale told by three narrators over 30 years,
a tale of the long struggle for freedom,
independence and finally peace. It is
testimony, reminding us it has always been
easier to wage war than foster and sustain
peace.
Nineteen thirty-two
(An Acadien Story)
Described by critics as a 'gem' and a 'little story
with a big heart'. Nineteen thirty-two is a tale
of mistaken identity. The wrong man has been
killed, but has justice inadvertently been
served? Nearly everyone in the small village
holds a grudge against the victim, even though
no one dares speak of it. David Landry is a
veteran of the war and his scars are visible for
all to see. An inspector in the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police, he distrusts the facts, veiled
as they are by furtive glances. But soon, too
soon, there are more important crimes to be
solved, more important that the killing of a
Frenchman in an obscure village. The scene is
Northern New Brunswick and the characters
are Acadiens, a people used to oppression,
centuries of it. It is 1932, a time when rum-
runners and bootleggers prop up a failed
economy, when the police have too much to
do, when the government cares more about
revenue than the welfare of its people, and
when the Marx Brothers ridicule society. With
the nation in the depths of a depression, the
memory of the First World War hangs over
everyone. The women know that war is an
inverse alchemy, transforming gold and silver
into iron and lead. Even more than a decade
after the armistice, the base metals still poison
the flesh and blood, the heart and soul. War
destroys that which is crucial in men – do they
not understand, those who choose to go to
war? Tongues of sea mist drift in from the Gulf
of St Lawrence, blurring events, obscuring
motives; ravens swoop down from the spear-
like branches of black spruce to witness, their
raucous cries a chorus of judgement.
The Moons of Jupiter
(An Acadien Story)
It is 1852. Four old people are huddled in a
tumble-down cabin on the North Shore of New
Brunswick; they are in hiding, only waiting for
the authorities to come and take them away.
They are cranky and unwell; as well, they are
anxious, and pass the time as best they can. It
is November and the weather is unkind;
outside English soldiers are going back and
forth along the shore adding to the oppressive
atmosphere in the cabin; the soldiers are
looking for clues to help them find their
missing captain but the four do not know this
and only assume the soldiers are far too
casual in their search for the four of them. This
is a tale of an unexpected alliance, a tale which
leads the reader through the mysteries, not
just those surrounding the four elderly
Acadiens in their cabin, but the century of
crimes which had led to this moment in time.
“Live simply so that others
may simply live.”
(Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi)
The Smell of Ice
It is 2010 and the Polar Explorer, a 178 metre
handyclass bulk carrier, is making its maiden
voyage. Everyone involved with the ship wants
to make a statement and the ship sets out
from Yokohama on the first unescorted voyage
through the Northwest Passage, bound for
New York City. The ship negotiates the early
pack ice of Lancaster Sound as far as the open
waters of the Baffin Sea. But it is here that the
unexpected looms out of the darkness, and
the ship runs aground. Winter is setting in,
temperatures have plummeted and storms are
forecast. Most of the crew are injured and help
from the Canadian Coast Guard is four long
days away. Asking nothing in return, it is the
residents of Baffin Island, the Inuit hunters and
guides, and a wildlife biologist who risk their
lives to rescue the crew and then find a way to
save the ship. Instead of gratitude, the
shipping company heads off on a trail of deceit
in an attempt to shift the blame and keep the
Northwest Passage open to shipping and free
from regulation.
The Stranger
Refuge Cove is a safe anchorage in the
archipelago that lies between Vancouver Island
and the mainland. A stranger arrives,
searching the temperate rainforests for the
secret of immortality. He returns eight years
later, and again eight years after that. In visit
after visit he sails into the cove but never
seems to grow any older. On his seventh
arrival he realises he has fallen in love. That
has never been part of his plan and it is further
complicated by the tragic news for the island’s
residents that he brings with him. This is a
story about love, about curiosity and
determination, and it is about the richness of
life that is often right in front of us.
The Night Already Devoid of
Stars
The Night Already Devoid of Stars is a tale
stolen from a time in the distant past and
hidden away in a secret place that will not exist
until tomorrow. It is a tale of love. It is a story
of lust in search of war. It is a reminder that
there is no courage without fear. Josef is a 29
year old virtual artist unable to leave his
apartment, and Miriam is a tattooed waif living
on promises and street smarts. They are set in
their ways, and it is difficult for each to deal
with the other. However, together, they are
more formidable than they ever envisioned.
The scene is the City, a small republic on an
inland sea wallowing in the aftermath of a civil
war, a war that solved nothing. The City’s
fathers dream of capturing lost glory and
delivering the final blow to their brothers in
the North. But glory dissolves leaving no trace,
and dreams are just dreams, lacking substance
and meaning. And war? Be warned, war is a
hungry beast best left in its distant wild place
where it cannot turn against those who would
use it against their brothers and sisters.