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Accidental City: The Transformation Of Toronto

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Accidental City: The Transformation Of Toronto

by Robert Fulford

Macfarlane, Walter & Ross | January 1, 1997 | Trade Paperback

With photos by Steven Evans.

Northrop Frye once called Toronto "a good place to mind your own business," and until the 1960s that was about the best that could be said for it. Toronto had no street life, no sidewalk cafes, no festivals, no downtown gathering place. It was a city of sober reticence.

"Accident," writes Robert Fulford "plays a role in the building of any city. It has played a major role in the transformation of Toronto." That transformation began with the opening in 1965 of the New City Hall and Nathan Phillips Square. Since then, Toronto has changed from a private city, seemingly without a collective identity, to a public one - a transformation that came about through the series of (mostly) happy accidents chronicled in this vastly entertaining urban tour.

Fulford, who grew up beside Lake Ontario and has lived in Toronto all his life, writes brilliantly about the city's architecture, its commercial development, its ravines, its monuments, its man-made underground, and its people - from Jane Jacobs, whose iconoclastic ideas on urban planning have had a profoundly positive effect on Toronto (where she ended up living mostly by accident), to Fred Gardiner, whose controversial expressway remains an eyesore decades after it was built.

Even the most knowledgeable Torontonian will be informed and entertained by Fulford's graceful erudition. Visitors will find the book an invaluable introduction to a city viewed by foreigners as a model of livable urbanity - and by many Canadians as the very symbol of smug self-satisfaction. Whatever your view of Toronto, it will be challenged and deepened by this original, insightful, and thoroughly engaging book.


From the Hardcover edition.
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Cities are living entities; they are born, they grow, they flourish and some of them die. Toronto is no exception. Toronto's evolution, from its early days as a dry town through to the thriving metropolis that it is today, happened slowly and with many speed bumps along the way. Acclaimed writer Robert Fulford's book Accidental City: The Transformation of Toronto, looks at the history of this great city and why it developed in the manner it did and who made it work. Fulford, who has lived in Toronto his whole life, has a unique perspective on the city and offers some interesting stories regarding everything from ravines and parks to neighborhoods and underground networks

From the Publisher

With photos by Steven Evans.

Northrop Frye once called Toronto "a good place to mind your own business," and until the 1960s that was about the best that could be said for it. Toronto had no street life, no sidewalk cafes, no festivals, no downtown gathering place. It was a city of sober reticence.

"Accident," writes Robert Fulford "plays a role in the building of any city. It has played a major role in the transformation of Toronto." That transformation began with the opening in 1965 of the New City Hall and Nathan Phillips Square. Since then, Toronto has changed from a private city, seemingly without a collective identity, to a public one - a transformation that came about through the series of (mostly) happy accidents chronicled in this vastly entertaining urban tour.

Fulford, who grew up beside Lake Ontario and has lived in Toronto all his life, writes brilliantly about the city's architecture, its commercial development, its ravines, its monuments, its man-made underground, and its people - from Jane Jacobs, whose iconoclastic ideas on urban planning have had a profoundly positive effect on Toronto (where she ended up living mostly by accident), to Fred Gardiner, whose controversial expressway remains an eyesore decades after it was built.

Even the most knowledgeable Torontonian will be informed and entertained by Fulford's graceful erudition. Visitors will find the book an invaluable introduction to a city viewed by foreigners as a model of livable urbanity - and by many Canadians as the very symbol of smug self-satisfaction. Whatever your view of Toronto, it will be challenged and deepened by this original, insightful, and thoroughly engaging book.


From the Hardcover edition.

About the Author

Robert Fulford has devoted much of his long, critically acclaimed writing life to culture and society, art and architecture, and politics and power. A nationally respected storyteller, essayist and critic, he has won many National Magazine Awards for his articles and broadcasts and has been honored with the Order of Canada and the Prix d'honneur of the Canadian Conference of the Arts. Former editor of Saturday Night for 19 years, he now writes a weekly column for The National Post. He is also a frequent contributor to Toronto Life, Canadian Art, and CBC radio and television.


From the Hardcover edition.

Trade Paperback

256 Pages, 5.25 x 8.3 x 0.7 in

January 1, 1997

Macfarlane, Walter & Ross


1551990105
9781551990101

From Community

From the Critics

"Toronto is one of the truly sparkling communities on our continent. This sparkling book tells how this has come about."
-John Kenneth Galbraith

"Accidental City is a joy…not just for Torontonians but for anyone interested in modern city life."
-Quill & Quire

"Fulford, the foremost cultural journalist in the country [exhibits] his eye for the significant anecdote and the telling quotation, his awareness of the broad social and cultural context, his sense of irony, his unerring ability to puncture myth and pretension, and above all the grace and with of his prose."
-Philip Marchand, Toronto Star


From the Hardcover edition.

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