"Felix,
you are a dreamer. I used to be, too, but there’s no payoff in it.”
Felix Ryan, from Curlew,
Conception Bay, has been in love with the enigmatic Ellen Monteau ever since
the day he met her in school at Smallwood High. Friends and family try to warn
him that she is nothing but trouble, but she is Helen of Troy and he longs to
be her King Menelaus . . . or Prince Paris. Meanwhile, trouble is brewing at
home, as Felix’s father erects an enormous sign on his house condemning Premier
Joey Smallwood—much to the chagrin of his family and their Liberal neighbours
in the early days after Confederation.
This is the uproariously funny
and at times heartbreaking tale of a young man's rough ride into adulthood.
Felix Ryan is on a journey to discover who he is and where he is headed. He
moves from rural Newfoundland to the hectic life of Memorial University in the
late 1960s. It is a world of music, girls, and new experiences. Felix's world
is changing as the Joey Smallwood era comes to an end. But Ellen Monteau never
strays far from his mind. Ultimately, he must choose between continuing his
education on the mainland of Canada, or putting down roots at home in
Newfoundland.