In Case I Go
- Publisher
- Arsenal Pulp Press
- Initial publish date
- Sep 2017
- Category
- Literary, Ghost, Contemporary Women, Small Town & Rural
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781551527031
- Publish Date
- Sep 2017
- List Price
- $17.95
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Description
The latest by Angie Abdou: young Eli invokes the spirit, and the mistakes, of his great-great-grandfather.
In Canada Reads finalist Angie Abdou's fifth work of fiction, Eli and his parents have returned to their family home in Coalton, a small mountain town. The parents, Nicholas and Lucy, hope that by escaping their hectic city lives, they will restore calm and stability to their marriage, but they find that once charming Coalton is no longer the remote idyll they remembered. Development of a high-end subdivision has disturbed a historic graveyard, drawing negative press from national media. While Nicholas works long hours at the local coal mine and Lucy battles loneliness and depression, Eli befriends Mary, a troubled Ktunaxa girl who lives next door. Both children, disturbed by visions of people and places long forgotten, are challenged to account for past lives of seduction and betrayal.
A new kind of ghost story, In Case I Go is about the many ways we're haunted by the misdeeds of our ancestors.
About the author
Angie Abdou began writing fiction in 2000 and has since published five books. Anything Boys Can Do was praised by the Times Colonist (British Columbia) for its original take on female sexuality. The Bone Cage, a novel about Olympic athletes, was the inaugural One Book, One Kootenay, as well as a 2011 Canada Reads finalist and the 2012 MacEwan Book of the Year. The Canterbury Trail (Brindle & Glass, 2011), is a dark comedy specifically about mountain culture and more generally about community and our relationship with the environment. The Canterbury Trail was a finalist for the Banff Mountain Book of the Year and won an IPPY (independent publishing award), Gold Medal for Canada West. Her fourth novel, Between (Arsenal Pulp Press), is about working mothers, foreign labour, and swingers' resorts. It was chosen as a best of 2014 by the Vancouver Sun, Prism Magazine, and 49th Shelf. Her latest book, What Remains (Arsenal Pulp Press), will be released in Fall 2017. Angie was born and raised in Moose Jaw, SK. She currently lives in the Crowsnest Pass area and works as a Professor of Creative Writing at Athabasca University.
Editorial Reviews
In Case I Go crackles with tension, mystery, and marvel from the opening pages. Intricately structured, saturated with compassion, and with a deep understanding for how the past affects the present, this novel is sure to win Angie Abdou the wide readership she deserves. -Lauren B. Davis, author of Our Daily Bread and The Empty Room
The past reaches up from the soil of In Case I Go to grab hold of its characters and readers alike, refusing to let go. Angie Abdou has written a grown-up work of fantasy, transporting as it is grounded and real. -Andrew Pyper, author of The Only Child and The Demonologist
In Case I Go is the gorgeous and shattering triumph of a writer at the very height of her powers. Each page pulls the reader through to the next -- compelling, heartbreaking, and convincing, this book demands to be lived. -Kevin Patterson, author of Country of Cold and News from the Red Desert
A spectacularly successful novel ... This book is highly recommended to anyone who cares about strong, moving fiction and about social justice. Vancouver Sun
Like the small coal mining town that Angie Abdou writes about in her latest work, In Case I Go is a deceptively complex testament to the intertwining histories of lives lived and lost, and the legacies they leave for those that follow. The Ktunaxa presence in her writing grounds this work, and in doing so Angie Abdou offers an important and timely contribution to the country's quest for reconciliation. Su'kini. -Anna (Sam) Hudson, Ktunaxa First Nation
The manner in which Abdou weaves a family drama with an overdetermined colonial history is literary brilliance. -subTerrain
In Eli's voice, Abdou has struck gold -- he's both sage and fretful, a reliable storyteller who is also at the vortex of the book's mercurial plot. -Chatelaine
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