From Amazon
Set near St. John, New Brunswick, Beth Powning's debut novel is a profound meditation on the nature of grief and memory. Kate, 52, has recently lost her husband, Tom, a painter, to a heart attack. Even as Kate mourns her tragic loss, she receives nine antique hatboxes filled with letters and documents from her ancestors in Hartford, Connecticut. Kate then commences an interior journey through her past, recalling when she would visit her grandparents in the great summer house of Shepton, where five generations of her family had lived. Sudden death at a young age is a recurring theme, and it is a tribute to this novel that the author is able to avoid any sense of the maudlin. In fact, when she relates the story of an eight-year-old relation dying of measles early in the century, the writing is riveting and the period scenes perfectly drawn.
What marks this novel as exceptional is its lyrical language. As Kate goes about her daily tasks and struggles with her memories, she sees the objects of the world--flowers, dew, clouds--with a near-painful clarity. Old envelopes are "embroidered by the teeth of mice." Adolescence is a time when "one has no idea that one is in mourning for childhood itself." Each leaf in her shining garden "holds a spear or prism or cup of light." Kate ultimately must find her own way to deal with the ghosts of her past, including a troublesome, heavy-drinking man she once knew who returns to her town to take a newspaper job. While the themes of this thoughtful novel might not appeal to every reader, it is beautifully, tenderly written. --Mark Frutkin
From Publishers Weekly
In this muted, measured debut, Powning captures the sorrow of a grieving widow as she revisits the past to heal present-day wounds. For 30 years, Kate's one constant has been Tom—her husband and best friend. A year after his death, 51-year-old Kate, alone in her lovely Victorian house in the Canadian countryside, is still having trouble acknowledging that he's gone. Distraction arrives in the form of a number of hatboxes from her grandparents' attic, full of letters smelling of apples and smoke that take Kate back to the simplicity of her childhood and Shepton, the family's rambling Connecticut home. But when Kate reads of a family tragedy, she sees a parallel between it and her own sorrow, and she begins to work through her feelings. Meanwhile, she grows close to Gregory, an old family friend who can't recover from his son's suicide, though she struggles with her feelings of pity and disgust for him when he makes some clumsy advances. Only a final calamity forces Kate to finally let go of the past and to start living in the present. The novel's leisurely pace takes some getting used to, but Powning does an excellent job of portraying Kate's sadness, divulging the tales of her family and focusing on the quiet beauty of her surroundings.
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