Shortlisted for the Governor General''s Literary Award:
Fiction and selected as a Globe and Mail Top 100 Book
Juliet Friesen is ten years old when her family moves to
Nicaragua. It is 1984, the height of Nicaragua''s
post-revolutionary war, and the peace-activist Friesens have come
to protest American involvement. In the midst of this tumult,
Juliet''s family lives outside of the boundaries of ordinary life.
They''ve escaped, and the ordinary rules don''t apply. Threat is
pervasive, danger is real, but the extremity of the situation also
produces a kind of euphoria, protecting Juliet''s family from its
own cracks and conflicts.
When Juliet''s younger brother becomes sick with cancer, their
adventure ends abruptly. The Friesens return to Canada only to find
that their lives beyond Nicaragua have become the war zone. One by
one, they drift from each other, and Juliet grows to adulthood,
pulled between her desire to live a free life like the one she
remembers in Nicaragua, and her desire to build for her own
children a life more settled than her parents could provide.
With laser-sharp prose and breathtaking insight, these stories
herald Carrie Snyder as one of Canada''s most prodigiously talented
writers.