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list price: $45.00
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
category: Fiction
published: Nov 2012
ISBN:9781926708515
publisher: Inanna Publications

Road to Thunder Hill

by Connie Barnes Rose

tagged: literary, contemporary women
Description

Over the years Trish and Ray have forged a stable family life, despite a rocky beginning almost twenty years earlier — living with their friends on a communal farm that ended badly. Now they are all coming to terms with life in their forties, but Trish has turned angry and insecure. She suddenly finds herself faced with an ailing marriage, a teenaged daughter who would prefer to live with her alcoholic grandmother than at home, and an annoying half sister, Olive, who Trish has been taught to believe is no blood relation. This cheery take-charge half sister, now living in Trish’s childhood summer home, seems bent on destroying the last shreds of Trish’s sense of self. When a freak April snowstorm hits Thunder Hill and the power goes out, Trish finds herself in a compromising situation with her hermit/hippie friend, Bear James, who also happens to be her husband’s closest friend. Later, when forced to seek refuge at her half-sister’s home, Trish feels she’s living a nightmare, one which drives her to face her past. Will the future hold anything for Trish other than that of becoming “a bitter old woman” and “immature freak,” accusations her daughter Gayl has flung at her recently?

About the Author
Connie Barnes Rose is a native of Amherst, Nova Scotia. She moved to Montreal where she met her husband and where they raised their two daughters. She earned a ba in Creative Writing in 1992 and an ma in English from Concordia University in 1996. Her collection of linked short stories, Getting Out of Town, was published in 1997 and short-listed for the qspell Award and the Dartmouth Award. She teaches creative writing at Concordia University and at the Quebec Writers’ Federation. She continues to live with her husband in Montreal and still manages to return to Nova Scotia every summer.
Editorial Review

Barnes Rose has that rare talent for character building that can make a novel pop from its pages, each character fully drawn, rich and utterly believable. Trish is complex: whip smart but resolutely unpretentious; self-possessed and critical, yet at the same time vulnerable and profoundly loving. The half-sister character, Olive, is one of the most comical and deftly delivered characters I have encountered in a novel in a good while. Barnes Rose also has a gift for gracefully moving her reader about in the plot line, dropping hints about stories in a character's past or future. Unlike some authors who abuse this technique, Barnes Rose manages to relieve the tension of that flashback or foreshadowing at just the right time, gently teasing us forward like a host mentioning a surprise desert at the door, thus making the whole meal all the more appetizing.

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