From the Publisher
After you''ve lost it all - job, house, savings,
future -what have you got left? A piercing new novel of our
times by one of Canada''s finest fiction writers.
On a chilly early morning in late spring, Joe Beaudry and his wife,
Laurie, wake up in circumstances that would challenge saints: they
are on the lam in a stolen motorhome on the edge of a Walmart
parking lot in Regina, Saskatchewan. They''ve gone bust,
spectacularly: lost the house that was Joe''s gift from his dad,
lost the business Joe started when he got married, and stuck his
ancient father in a nursing home in Winnipeg so they could flee
their creditors. Joe knows the reality of the situation, and is
trying to raise enough cash to get them both to Fort McMurray where
he hopes he can find work. But Laurie, even though she watched Joe
trash their high-end appliances with a sledgehammer when the yard
sale didn''t deliver enough cash, somehow thinks it''s only
temporary, and maxes out their last credit card on wardrobe and
hair dye and wishes and dreams. For Joe, it''s the last straw in a
marriage that once seemed star-crossed and now seems simply
unworkable.
Pushed to figure out what to do next, Joe simply takes off
hitchhiking, leaving Laurie waiting for Joe, and Joe wondering how
he will ever find meaning in a world that has disappointed his
every expectation. The road for both of them provides surprising
answers...
About the Author
SANDRA BIRDSELL, among Canada''s finest fiction writers, was born
in Manitoba, and lived for many years in Winnipeg. Her novel
The Russländer was nominated for the Giller Prize,
and her bestselling novel Children of the Day was
longlisted for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award and
won the Saskatchewan Book Award for Fiction. She is also the author
of three collections of short stories. She lives in Regina.
Format: Hardcover
Published: July 19, 2012
Publisher: Random House of Canada
Language: English
The following ISBNs are associated with this title:
ISBN - 10: 0307359166
ISBN - 13: 9780307359162