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199 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2025


I really like novels and stories that give you someone’s really intense psychology, and then make them die abruptly. You have this perspective shift at the end where someone else is watching their death or experiencing their death. And I think that even though Anna’s death didn’t make it into the novel in the end, you do get the other perspectives coming in late in the novel, and that was related to the idea as a form. It’s the death of her consciousness as the thing that the reader is trapped with.
"Long before anything “went wrong” the idea of flight had been within her. She had always felt the rituals of life did not make sense. She was afraid of making wrong decisions and therefore afraid of life itself. Everything that happened felt abstractedly wrong: whenever the world commanded here to do something she would think “why should I” not out of rebellion but despair."Wohlers's debut novel introduces us to Anna, a former painter who has discarded her old life to take over an apple orchard she inherited from her grandfather after his death. She hopes this change of life will lead to isolation, which will provide her with a peaceful grounding life has not previously offered.