canadian letters: Despite or perhaps, because of its woolly downtown, rheumatic shoreline and pockmarked history, Hamilton is vastly interesting, according to Hamilton Spectator. Toronto with a fever and the sweats. Although regarded, at least by down-the-nose Torontonians, as a greaser with a knife in its cuff a sentiment blithely echoed by Hamilton legend Tom Wilson, who has said that his city was punk rock before punk existed Lake Ontario's Steeltown finds itself rounding into a vanguard of new expression. While the works of Salvatore DiFalco, David Collier and others have mined these veins, it's still a place largely unwritten about in Canadian letters. Cole tells the story of ambitious mobster and bootlegger Rocco Perri small, stocky, social and quietly fearsome and the man who pursued him, a resolute and self-hating Italian immigrant named Frank Zaneth, regarded as the RCMP's first undercover operative. Another artist who has identified the city's narrative protein is Trevor Cole, whose recent book, The Whisky King The remarkable true story of Canada's most infamous bootlegger and the undercover Mountie on his trail, dives into an era when Hamilton was a bootlegging hub, filled with rounders, ghouls and thugs.
(www.immigrantscanada.com). As
reported in the news.
Tagged under canadian letters, punk rock topics.
17.4.17