New ebooks From Canadian Indies

9781926972183_cover Enlarge Cover
0 of 5
0 ratings
rated!
rated!
list price: $14.99
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
category: Fiction
published: Feb 2011
ISBN:9781926972183
publisher: Brindle & Glass Publishing

Sweetness from Ashes

by Marlyn Horsdal

tagged:
Description

Set partially in Vancouver, partially on a farm in rural Ontario and partially in West Africa, Sweetness from Ashes is a novel about family in its various forms. When Sheila, Jenny and Chris decide to respect a deceased relative’s wishes, and return the ashes to the family farm, the three begin a journey that takes them from their present-day lives in Vancouver to a deeper discovery of their roots and the family’s past. In Ontario, they meet their cousins and start to reconcile with a buried history. Mixed into the story is a book that Jenny is editing, a memoir of an Englishman living in the colonial Gold Coast in the 1950s. The link goes beyond the manuscript and interweaves with the Ontario family farm, and the new generation of people who have come home.

Sweetness from Ashes is a vibrant novel with a voice and perspective that is contemporary but gives a nod to the past.

About the Author

Marlyn Horsdal is an editor and writer. In 1984, she co-founded Horsdal & Schubart Publishers with her husband, Michael Schubart, and ran the company until it was sold in 2002. She was educated at Queen's University and the London School of Economics. Her first novel Sweetness from Ashes was named one of the Best Fiction Titles of 2010 by January Magazine. Marlyn lives on Salt Spring Island, BC.

Editorial Reviews

"A vibrant novel that begins to evolve when a death brings generations together and allows family stories to emerge."


"Horsdal has done well at creating a cast of nuanced, likeable characters."


"[Sweetness from Ashes] invites us to live a more fully eamined life and move from lament to realization and resolution."


"Sweetness from Ashes is a confident and accomplished debut."


"The story is a lovely one . . . Horsdal manages to show that while prejudice is alive, it is diminishing."

Buy the e-book:

X
Contacting facebook
Please wait...