Unravelling
Elizabeth Graver
(Author)
Description
From a small, bogside cabin in rural New England, 38-year-old Aimee Slater unravels the story of her life, attempting to make sense of the tangled thread that leads from her mother's house-a short, unbridgeable distance away-to the world she now inhabits. It is soon after the Civil War; Aimee lives alone, but is graced with visits from two friends, a crippled man and a troubled eleven-year-old girl. She is perpetually caught between the sensual world she so desires and the divine retribution passed down to her by her mother's scorn. How Aimee ultimately creates a life for herself and bridges that distance makes for a moving story of love and loss. Told in a voice of spare New England lyricism, Unravelling is a remarkably haunting account of the power of redemption.Product Details
Price
$23.95
Publisher
Mariner Books
Publish Date
August 12, 1999
Pages
304
Dimensions
5.5 X 0.78 X 8.47 inches | 0.86 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780156006101
BISAC Categories:
Earn by promoting books
Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.
About the Author
ELIZABETH GRAVER is the author of Unravelling and The Honey Thief. She teaches at Boston College and lives in Massachusetts
Reviews
"Like Margaret Atwood in Alias Grace, Elizabeth Graver examines what happens when a nineteenth-century woman defies the conventions of her place and time. . . . This tender, thoughtful novel pays tribute to the way a woman can ultimately patch together her crazy quilt of independence and fulfillment.-Glamour
"A pleasure, quiet and increasingly gripping. In images as simple and specific as that of Aimee's blind rabbit sniffing its salt lick, Graver endows the habits of coping with a profound dignity.-The New Yorker
"This beautiful novel captures the bittersweet relationship between mothers and daughters, where what is not said is just as important as what is.-Seventeen
"A pleasure, quiet and increasingly gripping. In images as simple and specific as that of Aimee's blind rabbit sniffing its salt lick, Graver endows the habits of coping with a profound dignity.-The New Yorker
"This beautiful novel captures the bittersweet relationship between mothers and daughters, where what is not said is just as important as what is.-Seventeen