One house, one hundred years — Here is a collection of interconnected short stories that bend time with a complex and varied cast of characters passing through a single mansion in Newfoundland, confronting the ghosts of family, perseverance, redemption, and survival.
Here is a collection of interconnected short stories that trails the inhabitants of a colonial mansion on Circular Road in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, over a span of 100 years. Aristocrats, hippies, housemaids, an all-girl rock band, a politician, a theologian, a biologist, a ballerina, a crow—over the decades, the house has a way of bending time for its varied occupiers, making readers question how our histories shape us and whether we can ever truly escape, or make peace with, the ghosts of the past.
Generations of stories all told in the backdrop of the same house. Wicks uses distinct dialect to showcase the array of unique characters that breaths life into each short story. Instead of cinematic boldness, the characters deal with life, including themes of mental illness and drug addition, with matter of fact tenderness. A comfortable escape that allows the reader to consider how homes can absorb all the joys and heartaches spent there.
Beautiful book. Must-read for a townie. Would love to read thru and keep notes to find all the nuanced connections between the short stories but lovely all the same. Lost me a bit in the last few chapters but still raving about it!
Interconnected short stories set in one historic house in St. John's. I'm not usually a fan of short stories, but I loved the way these stories came together.