- Paperback: 160 pages
- Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd; New edition edition (July 27 1989)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0140128409
- ISBN-13: 978-0140128406
- Product Dimensions: 19.4 x 12.8 x 1.2 cm
- Shipping Weight: 141 g
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With a sharp eye for the telling detail, a prose style which bends and adapts to reflect the thinking of her characters, a keen ear for dialogue, and an uncompromising integrity in carrying her themes forward, Astley creates a rough frontier world in which justice is relative-whatever works in carrying forward the goals of the community is "right." As the story moves back and forth in time through Dorahy's memories and Lunt's experiences, the reader observes sadistic town leaders encouraging violence and vengeance and a compliant population going along. As Dorahy tries to come to terms with his own role in the events and avenge the wrongs the town has done to Charlie Lunt, he is also hoping that in the end his own life will "add up."
Fast-paced, dramatic, and excruciatingly tense, this thirty-year-old novel examines the power of the majority, the nature of justice, and the roles of vengeance and forgiveness. As the town celebrates its twenty years of "progress" during the homecoming with songs and stories, the reader is haunted by the supreme irony of the words of Auld Lang Syne as they ring out: "We'll take a cup of kindness yet for Auld Lang Syne." Mary Whipple