Both a love letter and a window into the rural places that have shaped many, In a Distant Valley sets the stage for a final act to play out across a deep winter in snowy Maine.
For a while, Rose Douglas believed life had given her a break. She was enjoying a steady job at the local clinic in Dalton; her two young boys, Adam and Brandon, were doing well in school; and their little family had found an easy friendship with widower Nate Theroux and his daughter, Sophie. The possibility of something deeper even hung between her and Nate—until the day Tommy Merchant, her ex and the father of her sons, showed up without warning on her doorstep. While Rose knows all too well his erratic and abusive nature, he swears he’s clean, and ready to turn over a new leaf.
Tommy isn’t the only one who’s found his way back to the town that defined him. Lost after a disastrous stint living down south with her father, Angela Muse has returned home to Dalton. There she runs into Greg Fortin, the friend who once saved her life when they were children and finally starts to believe there may be someone who understands her in a world that offers more questions than answers.
But secrets are the lifeblood of a small town, and everyone in Dalton soon finds themselves part of a chain of events hurtling towards outcomes beyond their control, where more than one future will be decided. Brimming with compassion and heart, In a Distant Valley is the remarkable conclusion to the story readers have been following since Shannon Bowring’s debut novel, The Road to Dalton.
Shannon Bowring’s work has appeared in numerous journals, including Best Small Fictions, and has been nominated for Pushcart and Best of the Net prizes. She is the recipient of the 2022 Julia Peterkin Literary Award for Flash Fiction and was selected by Deesha Philyaw as a finalist for the Fractured Lit Anthology II Contest. Shannon has been recognized on such short- and long-lists as the Maine Literary Awards, the Writer’s Digest Short Story Competition and the New Millennium Writing Awards. Her debut novel, The Road to Dalton, received a Kirkus Starred Review and was included in the June 2023 Indie Next List. Shannon’s sequel to Dalton, WHERE THE FOREST MEETS THE RIVER, is forthcoming from Europa Editions.
Raised in Northern Maine, Shannon now resides in the mid-coast region of the state, where she works as a cataloger at her local public library.
the setup… The story continues with Rose Douglas who has grown comfortable and confident now that her abusive ex, Tommy Merchant, left town five years ago. She’s loving her job at the clinic, her two boys are thriving and she’s tiptoeing around a potential relationship with widower Nate Theroux. But when Tommy suddenly shows back up, their lives are disrupted even though he professes to be a changed man. Meanwhile, Greg Fortin is reluctantly back from college for the holidays, fully expecting his father to continue pressuring him to continue the family business legacy and commit to running the hardware store. Things look up when he discovers Angela Muse, his high school best friend and secret crush, has returned home to Dalton. But she’s still battling demons and he still needs to come clean with her and his family about his sexual identity.
the heart of the story… While there isn’t a lot of explosive drama in Dalton, the quiet reflections of the people in this town expose the issues they face that are common in any city, large or small. Domestic abuse, fear of rejection because of sexual identity differences, drug and alcohol abuse are just some of the issues dealt with here. But what’s different is how this small community looks out for one another, sensing when someone needs support and when they just need space. The connections are real and substantive.
the narration… Patricia Shade is the voice of this series and I love what she contributes to the storytelling. Her subtlety and voice tone are perfectly suited to the writing.
the bottom line… I felt so much tension for Rose throughout the story and was rooting for her and Nate, despite the potential disaster from her ex. The other plot lines were equally compelling if less dramatic but underneath all was a sensitivity and authenticity that reflects real life. The strong sense of community resonates powerfully, one of the elements I’ve found endearing this series. I hate saying goodbye to these characters and Dalton, Maine but the author left me in a really good place.
Such a bittersweet visit to Dalton knowing that this was the final book. I loved each and every character and will miss them as I would friends. But life will go on- with love and grief and the challenges of living. Kudos to Shannon Bowrirng for her creation of indelible characters and a glorious town In Maine.
“In a Distant Valley” by Shannon Bowring is the third book in the “Dalton” series, full of the wonderful, eclectic, and unforgettable denizens of Dalton, Maine, as they navigate life in the 1990s.
This is the kind of series best read in order, so if you are here, but haven’t yet read “The Road to Dalton” and “Where the Forest Meets the River” you are in for a treat, because those books are as wonderful as this one is!
I don’t know if Bowring will ever return us to Dalton, but if this is the last we know of them, it’s a satisfying conclusion. I shall miss them all.
What a beautiful braiding of lives as Ms. Bowring revisits the beloved town of Dalton, Maine. With empathy, compassion, sorrow, love and disdain, the protagonists of this trilogy come alive on these pages after a brief hiatus of time. The interwoven tales meld together lives, longing, hope and disappointment. There isn't a skipped beat in this heartfelt book.
No one in Dalton is exempt from close examination. I feel like Ms. Bowring shows a braver and more personal side of her authorship in this book. The previous two novels in this trilogy are wonderful but 'In a Distant Valley' shines above all. Ms. Bowring explores the inner lives of her characters with honesty and fervor, not sparing anyone from her fierce glance.
This will definitely be on my top ten list for the year. I love how each character takes charge of their life, even if minimally. Acceptance and hope shine through as Dalton's residents come to an understanding of how the past has shaped them, and the future awaits.
Every character carries a burden and a painful history but Ms Bowring has freed all but Tommy from despair. She owns her anger at his choices and how they hurt and damage those in his path. Yes, his actions bring tragedy, but he can no longer continue to blame others for what he has brought on himself. I loved sharing Sophie's brightness, Nates self-acceptance, Rose's openness to a second chance, and Greg's coming to terms with his true self. The deep and everlasting love between Trudy and Bev moved me deeply.
Ms. Bowring understands the many facets of love and the unique aspects of intimacy. Her gift is her ability to share love and sorrow with her readers. She does not back away from pain, but she never leaves a character without hope.
This is a perfect conclusion to Bowring's Dalton novels. Themes of addiction, identity, generational trauma, family, and interpersonal relationships set in small town Maine. I love these characters so much, and am so glad to have spent more time with them. I'll think about Dalton and its inhabitants for years to come.
A fitting end to the Dalton trilogy. I will miss spending time with Bev and Trudy, Nate, Greg, and all the other characters in these novels.
If you enjoy small town stories, read these books. If you enjoy well written, character driven novels, read these books. If you lived in the 70s and 80s, read these books.
Something about this series is so comforting to me and I’m sad this is the last book. I could have done with less about Tommy, but overall I loved this one as much as the first two books.
Picked this book up not realizing it was the third book in a trilogy. Despite some of the impact probably being lost because I didn’t read the first or second novel, I throughly enjoyed this book. It draws you straight into the world and wraps you in the cold and cozy blanket of wintertime in Dalton, Maine. So, if you accidentally buy this book not realizing it’s the final book in a trilogy, do not despair. Still totally worth the read.
The final Dalton book was lovely just like the first two. Revisiting these characters in this place and time is always a treat. I will say this book was quite a bit slower but it definitely did pick up the pace in the last 100 pages or so. I look forward to reading whatever Shannon Bowring does next.
They were so different back then from who they are now. Hard to believe a person can go through so many iterations of oneself - all the infinite, tiny changes that occur minute to minute, day to day, year to year....a constant evolution, everything moving always onward. In a Distant Valley Shannon Bowring • I was choked up as I turned the last page of the final book in the Dalton Trilogy, as it has come to be known. I first visited the fictitious Dalton, Maine in 2023 when I read The Road to Dalton (thank you Europa Editions for knowing I would adore it). I became immersed in this honest depiction of a working class town in Maine and the people who make up the community. I was thrilled to interview Shannon Bowring and then felt even more connected to the world she created. (Interview in Highlights) • These books contain multitudes. Bowring crafted a town that is every bit as real as if you stepped into the pages yourself. The characters are hardworking, often down on their luck, suffering from all the things that life tosses at all of us. This is not the Maine of elite summer homes, but the Maine you see when you drive in from the coast where the living takes place. Dalton is a town where everyone knows your name and your story, where they watch and care for one another, and this community felt so authentic I was elated when book #2 (Where the Forest Meets the River) and finally the last in the series were announced. • I know the question always arises “do I need to read them in order” and I would say YES! Bowring does a great job at refreshing the story for books 2 and 3, but if you want to immerse yourself in these lives, it’s important to know where their stories began. • Bowring doesn’t shy away from tough topics and this last book felt a bit edgier than the first 2, but The Road to Dalton broke lots of readers’ hearts and In a Distant Valley will mend those heartbreaks. • There aren’t a lot of authors who can see a story through all the iterations and not have a reader bored or let down but Bowring managed to do it 3x over. I’ll be thinking about Dalton for years to come. • Out 10/7 - plenty of time to read books 1 and 2.
The most notable thing (for me at least) was the mention of something called "Bicker Batter Bread". I had to rewind my audiobook and slow it down, repeating the phrase several times to be sure I heard it right. Some kind of soft yeast bread with a sweet glaze, served in the school cafeteria. Off to Google I went, where I found the only mentions to this in Facebook groups related to Ashland, Maine. Apparently it was made at the local high school, and people have fond memories of the school smelling yeasty and sweet on bicker batter bread day. I immediately posted, asking if anyone knew a recipe. Someone shared a recipe, which stated that the amount of flour was just...enough to make a thick dough. So helpful, but so delightfully typical of a lunch lady recipe. Still, I'm not a bread novice, so I was able to extrapolate enough to try my hand, and the result was a soft, fluffy, slightly chewy bread, baked flat on a sheet pan. It was almost like a good yeast doughnut, minus the fried component. Or, because of the sweet glaze, almost like a cinnamon roll without the filling, and also it's a flat slab? Like white bread and a doughnut and a sheet cake all gave birth to this confection. Deliciously simple, and I ate four slices by bedtime. There was some discussion about whether cinnamon was included in the glaze (as the author notes in this book) or whether it was just plain vanilla, so I frosted the bread with both options; the cinnamon is superior, though both are good. NO IDEA where the name comes from; it's not a batter bread, and why "bicker"? Doesn't seem to be a surname in that area, unless it's a misspelling of Becker. Or maybe it literally just means the word bicker. Was the bread born from a dispute? Maybe a husband and wife were arguing over whether she should bake cake or bread, so she threw up her hands and came up with this compromise.
Anyway, this trilogy has proven popular with my library patrons, and it led me to a new sweet bread. Win win!
This is the third and final installment of a series of character driven novel about the people of a community in Maine, Dalton. While as I have gotten older, I have grown to have less patience with the kind of character driven novels that have little plot, and this is that type of novel, this was an exemplary series which demonstrates Ms. Bowring’s keen sense of detail and ability to convey the kind of rich characters that you would just love to sit down with over a good up of coffee. The big catch is that these meetings would need to take place in Dalton because throughout the series, Ms. Bowring brings the reader right into this small town that you can’t help but want to be there. Every once in a while, a writer creates the kind of setting that is so rich and detailed that it is virtually its own character. That is what Ms. Dalton does. The author explores themes of family, addition and relationship with a broad scope and without hitting the readers over the head with them. She uses the interactions between the characters as well as the setting to accomplish this. This last installment did feel like a conclusion, which is laudable. I was still engaged with the residents of Dalton but I was beginning to feel about two thirds of the way through like Ms. Bowring was starting to run out of steam, even though her gift for details and use of language remained strong as it did throughout the rest of the series. While I loved Dalton and its residents, including the town’s level of dysfunction, I was ready for the series to end. I am looking forward to seeing this author apply her skills to a new book or series. Thanks to Edelweiss and Europa Publishing for providing me with an advanced copy of this novel in exchange for my honest opinion. 4 1/2 stars.
No need for another summary — there are plenty out there. Let’s get straight to what I thought!
Bowring brings the experiences and stories of Dalton, Maine’s residents to a thoughtful close for the reader. This has been the most unexpectedly delightful and heartwarming series. As I said in a review of another book in the series, Bowring created wonderful characters with relatable struggles and complications. Her setting in the 1990s didn't feel dated, unlike some books set in the 1990s.
At the conclusion of the series, I loved Rose's storyline the most, followed by Trudy and Bev's. Really, I didn't hate any character storyline, even Tommy's. Redemption—and the pursuit of it—is a hard road to travel, with many obstacles and potholes.
One of the things I loved most about the series was how Bowring didn't tie everything up with a pretty bow; she let real life inform her fiction and resisted the urge to write a "happily ever after" ending. Yes, at the end of the book and series characters Bowring introduced to us are living happy, fulfilled lives, but that is a state that ebbs and flows with the day-to-day. We know that, and Bowring's Dalton, Maine residents know that as well.
Fantastic series, thank you, Bowring, for sharing Dalton, Maine, with us.
This is the third novel / short story collection in the Dalton series, which starts with THE ROAD TO DALTON.
I highly recommend this entire series. Dalton is a working-class town in Northern Maine, and it features enduring characters who are going through life with struggles and humanity, like you and me. While I don't want to give too much away, the town police officer Nate is the cornerstone of the novel. However, I'd say there are many (but not an overwhelming number of) characters. I like that this third book showed domestic abuse survivor Rose and her abuser Tommy. Even Tommy was shown with such humanity.
A side note about these novels is the 1990s setting. They don't have a ton of pop culture references, but it's obvious that the author wanted to downplay the pervasiveness of technology.
In the last of the Dalton series Shannon Bowring does a beautiful job of bringing this collection to an end. I don't think I have ever read a series where I have given all the books five stars. In a Distant Valley follows all of the previous characters from the previous books, starting shortly after Where the Forest Meets the River Ends. Just like the others, it is a quiet book with wonderful character descriptions where you really feel like you are in the small town and know these people well. It is a story of friendship and grief, abuse and addiction and eventually hope, love and community. I highly recommend the Dalton books.
“They were so different back then from who they are now. Hard to believe a person can go through so many iterations of oneself—all the infinite, tiny changes that occur minute to minute, day to day, year to year. But that's life, Trudy supposes, a constant evolution, everything moving always onward.”
This reading experience was like being back with old friends. Bowring does such an incredible job of writing incredibly real characters and relationships, it's impossible not to get invested in their lives. This was a perfect end to the series, and gave me answers I didn't know I needed. Read this is you enjoy small town stories, well-drawn characters, and complicated family stories. For people who stories set in Maine, this is my top recommendation for the real Maine (not the touristy beach version that gets written about by authors who have been here all of one time).
What a great trilogy this ended up being. I reread The Road to Dalton in advance of the 3rd book. I was glued to every page. I haven’t stayed up this late to finish up a book in years. I haven’t immediately told all of my book buddies that this was just terrific. This was a total encapsulation of a community in Maine that is more than what they seem to be. I was moved. I was floored. And I just had a really great time reading all 3 of these.
Absolutely gutted that this series is over. The book was just as wonderful as I was hoping, and I’m thrilled with how things wrapped up. Shannon Bowring perfectly captured the nuances of so many different types of relationships. I would have loved to see more of Trudy and Bev in this one, but I’m happy with the pieces we got. Can’t we please get another one??
Love, love, LOVE the community of characters and the sense of place that Shannon Bowring has created in the Dalton series. This third book in the trilogy wraps up almost every story line, but I can’t help but hope for a sequel, or a prequel, or anything that brings us back to the people and the place of this small Maine town.
I could not wait for this to come out after reading the first two, and it did not disappoint!! Maybe the best book in the series. I don't know how Bowring writes from so many different perspectives like she's lived the lives of every single character, but she has delivered yet another poignant depiction of life in a small town.
I started out thinking this would be too grim, but soon realized that it was part of a series and that I had read and enjoyed at least the first book, so I kept going. And it is grim, but only enough to make it real. It's also all the other things I want in a novel, like hopeful and insightful. By the end, I was thinking Oh - this is like Richard Russo's books! Fabulous.
This feels like saying goodbye to old friends. The author nicely wrapped up the stories of the residents of Dalton, Maine, although I wouldn’t be upset if she wrote another volume to cover their lives as they move into the 21st century.
This final book in the Dalton trilogy was truly satisfying. Set in small town Dalton, Maine in the mid-1990s, I enjoyed following the lives of several characters, each dealing with his or her own secrets and challenges.
I loved this final book in the Dalton trilogy. Bowring has this beautiful approach to storytelling and isn't afraid to conquer challenging topics. Further, she did a tremendous job in this book of tying the characters together.
If you haven't read Bowring's books, I highly recommend!
I am going to miss my time in Dalton! This series has been one of my favorites!! Being a Maine girl myself I had to give this author a try and now she has me hooked. I can only wish for my own Nate to come my way one day!!
As comforting as baked beans and homemade bread on a Saturday night (iykyk). The third in her trilogy set in Dalton, Maine, IN A DISTANT VALLEY rewards readers who care deeply about Trudy and Bev, Nate and Rose, Greg and Angela, and all the complex, rich characters of this small up-country town.