From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. What might have been the stuff of boyish fantasies—an affair with a teacher, running away from home, living off the land—goes frighteningly awry in this unsettling but bleakly beautiful debut novel. It's 1972 in Paducah, Ky., and quiet 17-year-old Thomas Mahey falls into an intense affair with his 25-year-old history teacher, Alice Lowe. Independently, they both befriend Shiloh Tanager, a wily, good-hearted local anarchist, and the three hit the road for rural Vermont, determined to live "off the grid." No sooner does the trio settle into an abandoned house than things begin to unravel. Thomas is torn between loyalty to Shiloh and an all-consuming love for Alice, and riddled with guilt for wordlessly leaving his parents. Meanwhile, the homesteaders' efforts at growing food fail. When an unwelcome visitor from Shiloh's past appears, he brings to a head the increasingly desperate atmosphere of secrets and resentment that their idyll has become. Tussing skillfully crafts simultaneously visionary and demented characters (chapters following two men who investigate "miracles" for the Catholic Church punctuate the trio's story), and when an element of the supernatural infiltrates the narrative it seems normal for the deliberately off-kilter people who inhabit this odd but honest, appealing American story.
(Feb.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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From Booklist
The intensity of first love, the complexity of friendship, and the responsibility of freedom are explored through plaintive and powerful imagery in Tussing's breathtaking debut novel about an unlikely trio of friends and lovers who attempt to forge brave new lives for themselves independent of family ties and the conventions of society. It's the early 1970s, a time when lofty ideals such as peace, love, and understanding are awakening passions in the young and impressionable. When 17-year-old Thomas falls in love with Alice, his 25-year-old teacher, they escape the suffocating confines of Paducah, Kentucky, in the company of Shiloh, an eccentric drifter who serves as a guide as they set up a squatter's camp in the isolated Vermont mountains. As spring's rosy blush gives way to summer's heated passions and fall's descending chill, the reality of their reduced circumstances is ominously revealed under winter's harsh demands. A hauntingly atmospheric ode to love's enigmatic and labyrinthine nature.
Carol HaggasCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.