Burning Marguerite
|
| List Price: | CDN$ 20.00 |
| Price: | CDN$ 15.41 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $39. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 2 to 3 weeks
Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca
22 new or used available from CDN$ 0.01
Average customer review:(13 )
Product Description
One winter morning James Jack Wright finds ninety-four-year-old Marguerite Deo—the woman he has always known as “Tante”—lying dead in the woods outside his cabin, clad only in a flowered nightgown. With this arresting scene, Elizabeth Inness-Brown ushers readers into her mysterious and lyrical narrative, the story of two closely braided lives that forces a reconsideration of our notions of maternity, loyalty, love, and perhaps death itself.
As James Jack sets out to fulfill Marguerite’s unusual last wishes, the narrative unveils the secrets of their pasts. It arcs from Depression-era New Orleans to a barren New England island at the turn of the century, from an illicit passion and an unforgivable crime to the relationship between a small boy and a tough, reclusive woman who turns out to possess an unsuspected capacity for love.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1406519 in Books
- Published on: 2003-05-13
- Released on: 2003-05-13
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: 8.01" h x .51" w x 5.17" l, .40 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 256 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Amazon.com
From the first incantatory sentence in Burning Marguerite ("I can see spring in winter") to the last, Elizabeth Inness-Brown draws us into a north-country winter's tale with all the strange power of a dream. The novel is set on remote Grain Island, reachable only by ferry. First settled by the French, Grain Island now has two distinct populations: wealthy summer folks and hardy year-round inhabitants, who while away winter days ice fishing. Burning Marguerite begins in winter with a mysterious death, and goes on to reveal other mysteries and other deaths, including a violent crime. It alternates between the third-person point of view of 35-year-old James Jack and the first-person musings of Tante, the 94-year-old woman who raised him after his parents drowned when he was 4 years old. To all appearances a spinster, Tante has many secrets, including how she lost the little finger of her left hand and why she fled Grain Island for New Orleans as a young woman and never returned until after her parents died. James Jack keeps a secret of his own--a promise he made to Tante, one that embroils him with the island's sheriff, who almost adopted him, and an unhappily married woman. Burning Marguerite is a poetically written and haunting debut novel. --Susan Biskeborn
From Publishers Weekly
The tragic family circumstances that bring together a young man and the "aunt" who raises him are the subject of this lyrical first novel, which ranges in setting from the rocky Northeast to the sultry South. The story begins on a tiny New England island in the late 1990s, as James Jack discovers the dead body of the 94-year-old woman he knew as his aunt, Marguerite Anne Bernadette-Marie Deo, as he is returning to the cottage they shared. The death sets off a series of parallel flashbacks revealing a tangled web of tragedy and murder that forms the backbone of the two characters' overlapping pasts, with fire as a recurring motif. It was a fire that led to Jack being placed in Deo's care, and that story is relayed, as is some of Jack's twisted family history. A tender account of his budding relationship with Faith, a woman who enters his life just before Deo's death, serves as counterpoint to the story of Deo's early life and her ill-fated affair with a Native American laborer that resulted in a shocking murder. Inness-Brown probes her characters deftly and thoroughly, using landscape and sense of place to augment the plot as the setting shifts to New Orleans and back to New England. Occasionally the chronology of the narrative gets a bit muddled as it switches back and forth between the flashbacks of Jack, Faith and Deo, but there's no doubt about this author's ability to convey the complex passions of her characters. Following on the heels of two well-reviewed short story collections (Satin Palms and Here), this novel represents a solid building block in the foundation of a promising career. Northeast 6-city author tour.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
It is shocking enough when James Jack finds that his elderly "Tante" Marguerite has frozen to death one night near his cabin but then he starts investigating her life. This first novel merits a six-city author tour.
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
