Emmeline lives in rural Saskatchewan, where her family struggles to eke out a living on a small farm. Her father has never wanted to be a farmer, and when he accidentally injures Emmeline with his tractor, he leaves the farm without saying goodbye. Emmeline now has a permanent disability in the form of an injured and shortened leg, and meanwhile her mother struggles to keep the farm going. At last, she decides to take on Angus, a former inmate of the state's psychiatric hospital, to work her land. Angus is at the heart of this novel: Emmeline gradually befriends him, and realises that the stigma and cruelty he encounters is baseless. Overall, this novel-in-verse is quietly uplifting, as Emmeline learns to make sense of her life without her father and with a disability, and learns to trust Angus and hears his story. It's sensitive and thoughtful, but somehow lacks passion: Emmeline isn't angry or sad enough for this reader to really feel with her, and though the story covers big themes, it manages not to maintain any tension. I'm very interested in the issues of personhood and recovery that Porter raises here, yet I don't think I will find this book very memorable.