


In Halifax, the war has given Penny the opportunity to become a successful naval architect at the Halifax Shipyard. Colonel Wain was forced to return to Canada as a transportation officer. Yet, prior to the court martial, Neil was believed to have died in artillery strike. When the order ended in disaster, Colonel Wain attempted to blame Neil in hopes of retaining his position in the military. Neil seeks Alec MacKenzie, the only other survivor of their unit who can confirm that Colonel Wain had given an contradictory order, which was impossible to fulfill. Neil, however, had not died, but has returned to Halifax to clear his name of its tarnish. The family is under the impression that Neil had died in the disgrace of desertion. Penelope Wain believes that her cousin, Neil Macrae, has been killed while serving overseas under her father, Colonel Geoffrey Wain. The novel takes place during the week of the Halifax Explosion - 2 December 1917 to 10 December 1917. Prior to MacLennan's novel, there had been no real tradition of Canadian literature he sought to define Canada for Canadians through a national novel. He drew upon his own experiences of the Halifax Explosion, having survived it as ten-year-old boy, but also on Homer's Odyssey for narrative direction. She told him that "Nobody's going to understand Canada until she evolves a literature of her own, and you're the fellow to start bringing Canadian novels up to date." Barometer Rising became Hugh MacLennan's first published novel. She encouraged him to write about Canada, the country he knew best. The novel, with afterword by Alistair MacLeod, ranks among the books which compose the New Canadian Library.ĭorothy Duncan, Hugh MacLennan's wife, convinced him that the failure of his first two novels arose from not truly knowing the setting, as one had been set in Europe and the other in the United States. Once published, the novel was wildly successful, and permitted MacLennan to leave his full-time job at Lower Canada College. The book had been difficult to publish as MacLennan had previously written regarding international themes, while Barometer Rising contained a decidedly nationalist overtone. The narrative predominantly follows and pivots upon the romantic life of Penny Wain. The work explores life in Halifax, Nova Scotia during World War I, and its interruption by the Halifax explosion.

Barometer Rising is a romantic-realist novel by Canadian author Hugh MacLennan.
