The Long Stretch (1999) is the first entry in Linden MacIntyre's Cape Breton Trilogy, which includes the novels The Bishop's Man (2006) and Why Men Lie (2012). Looking at this novel in isolation, it's easy to see why the author felt compelled to return to these characters in later works. The Long Stretch, filled with ghosts whose past actions have determined the course that many lives follow in the present, leaves more than a few questions unanswered and narrative possibilities unexplored. In these pages there are secrets and bad behaviour galore as well as enough half-truth, rumour and innuendo to fill ten novels. Sextus Gillis has returned to Port Hastings, Cape Breton, after an absence of many years and while in town encounters his cousin John (a recovering alcoholic) on the street outside the liquor store (where else?). They retreat to the kitchen of John's family house (located on "the long stretch" of road outside of town), where John now lives by himself, and what follows is a night-long booze-soaked conversation between the two. The cousins share a fraught personal relationship (John's wife Effie ran off to Toronto with Sextus; Sextus--a journalist--published a novel loosely based on the Gillis family's private history, borrowing liberally from John's experiences), which makes their conversation--filled with confession and accusation--occasionally tense and even physical. The novel, set in November 1983, describes events mostly from the previous two decades, but also reaches back to their fathers' experiences overseas in WWII. For a narrative based largely on an extended dialogue between two people, the novel generates great suspense as we wait to see what rumour will be debunked and secret revealed next. The narrator is John, and as the conversation moves forward he recounts his own impressions of those times for the reader's benefit. This is a complex story of tragedy, betrayal and relentless disappointment as the characters struggle to make their own lives and those of their families livable during a seemingly endless cycle of boom and bust engendered by flawed government economic initiatives in a chronically disadvantaged region. More than anything else, though, it is a study of how misunderstanding, hidden truth and lingering resentment can lay waste to lives and families. A compelling read.