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list price: $9.99
edition:eBook
category: Fiction
published: Apr 2012
ISBN:9781897109816
publisher: Signature Editions

The Checkout Girl

by Susan Zettell

tagged: literary
Description

It's 1970, and the optimism of Trudeaumania is starting to give way to fears of wage and price controls. In Varnum, Ontario, where the smell of industry is the smell of money, a lot of that money's heading south, just like Bobby Orr.

 

The Checkout Girl is the story of Kathy Rausch, whose life these days is something that just seems to happen to her. After sneaking out on her boyfriend in Vancouver, Kathy moves back to Varnum and hides out in the basement of her high school buddy, Penny Lehman, in a room she shares with Penny's skittish boa constrictor, Freddie.

When Kathy isn't checking out groceries, she practices hockey drills. And when she isn't practicing, she's warding off advances from fellow basement dweller "Little" Barry Bender, ignoring her well-meaning mother, Connie, hanging out with her best friend, champion baton twirler Darlyn Smola, and dealing a bit of marijuana for Penny's husband Pete. But when Kathy stumbles upon a brutal murder she is finally driven to put her hockey stick where her heart is: on the ice.

About the Author

Susan Zettell

Born and raised in Kitchener, Ontario, Susan Zettell has lived in Cambridge, Vancouver, Halifax, Ottawa and Whitehorse. She now lives in Cape Breton. Susan is the author of the novel The Checkout Girl, as well as two short-story collections, Night Watch and Holy Days of Obligation. Her stories have been anthologized in Quintet, Spider Women, The Day the Men Went to Town, and The Company We Keep. She edited, along with Frances Itani, the posthumous story collection One of the Chosen by Danuta Gleed.

Editorial Review

The Checkout Girl is the story of a young woman who works as a cashier, while dreaming of Bobby Orr and being a hockey player. The book is set in 1970 when such dreams, at least for women, were ridiculous and, predictably, she has a rough time. Yet, in the end, she does manage to find a way to make a living from the ice and she survives, even thrives. Zettell outlines some of the inspiration behind the book."The first fragment of the story occurred to me while I was playing hockey, or shinny really, on an outdoor rink in Ottawa," Zettell recalls. "I was part of a group of middle-aged women who formed a hockey team we called MAMMAH (Middle Aged Menopausal Mothers Attempt Hockey) to play shinny one night a week throughout the winter. I was terrified I'd end up dead or at least with a concussion (which almost happened even with a helmet). But from the first night out, the skating, the exertion, the laughter and good-natured competitiveness, the sheer joy at playing outside in the dark in winter was exhilarating. I couldn't remember the last time I had had so much fun. So when I began to think about writing a novel in which a young woman was going through a sticky time in her life, I knew that hockey, but most particularly skating, some of it outdoors, would be at the heart of her life.

— The Chronicle Herald

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