Algonquin Elegy
Tom Thomson's Last Spring
by
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About the Book
The mystery of Canada's artist Tom Thomson's drowning in Algonquin Park's Canoe Lake in 1917 have never before been so thoroughly been investigated, documented and reported to the public. Here is what Tom Thomson experts have to say about the book:
"Neil J. Lehto's Algonquin Elegy: Tom Thomson's Last Spring, is both a labor of love and a labor of gargantuan effort to come to some understanding, nine decades on, of exactly what happened that summer of 1917. Perhaps no one has ever worked as hard to know the unknowable and, in doing so, he has contributed invaluably to the greatest story in all of Canadian art. Neil's passion for Tom Thomson shines through as passionately on each page as Thomson's passion for Algonquin Park shines though on each painting he left behind that last Spring."
-Roy MacGregor, Columnist for The Globe & Mail in Toronto, writer of a novel based on the mystery of painter Tom Thomson's final days, Canoe Lake
-Joan Murray, Executive Director and CEO, McMichael Canadian Art Collection, Kleinburg, Ontario.
About the Author
Neil J. Lehto is a lawyer in Berkley, Michigan. He made investigating Tom Thomson's death a personal quest over the last twenty years since his first visit to canoe and camp in Ontario's Algonquin Park, where the story begins. Thomson is Canada's greatest landscape painter. His large canvas paintings are exhibited in Canada's museums. Recent auctions of even his small painting on wood panels have reached into the millions. Several books have tried to explain Thomson's mysterious drowning in 1917. Was it an accident, murder or suicide? Read Algonquin Elegy and decide for yourself.