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The older Owen siblings - Ellen and Morris - long ago left behind
their gracious family home in Alabama in favour of the northeast.
But when they learn that their wayward baby sister Bonnie has moved
back into the old place with her new husband, a local evangelical
preacher, they head home to perform a rescue.
When two students are found dead in their small Florida hometown,
an aging brother and sister are forced to confront their own dark
past while on the hunt for a murderer As a successful news
photographer, Francis Brimm has lived a life of adventure,
traveling the world and accumulating little baggage-either material
or personal. Now nearing retirement, he has decided to move back to
his Florida hometown, where his sister, Muriel, by her own
admission, has led a much less fulfilling existence. As children of
an alcoholic father and an icy, withholding mother, the siblings
have found that the wounds of childhood remain well into adulthood.
The scars of their past come into stark relief when Francis and
Muriel find the bones of two children, both students of the nearby
school for the blind. In the search for the killer, they are both
forced to reexamine the long-ago trauma that shaped their lives.
Suspenseful and psychologically astute, School for the Blind is a
masterwork of literary fiction by bestselling author Dennis
McFarland.
The profound coming-of-age story of a young boy growing up in rural
Virginia, and the historic summer that would change his life
forever During the summer of 1959, Virginia's Prince Edward County
is entirely consumed by passionate resistance against, and in other
corners, support for, the desegregation of schools as mandated by
Brown v. Board of Education. Benjamin Rome, the ten-year-old son of
a chicken farmer in one of the county's small townships, struggles
to comprehend the furor that surrounds him, even as he understands
the immorality of racial prejudice. Within his own family, opinions
are sharply divided, and it is against this charged backdrop that
Ben spends the summer working with his friend Burghardt, a black
farmhand, under the predatory gaze of Ben's grandfather. While the
elders of Prince Edward focus on closing the schools, life ambles
on, and Ben grows closer to his pregnant sister, Lainie, and his
troubled older brother, Al, while also coming to recognize the
painful and inherent limitations of his friendship with Burghardt.
Evocative and written with lush historical detail, Prince Edward is
a refreshing bildungsroman by bestselling author Dennis McFarland,
and a striking portrait of the social upheaval in the American
South on the eve of the civil rights movement.
Bestselling author Dennis McFarland's masterful novel about three
people's struggles to reclaim their lives in the wake of
unfathomable tragedy In a moment of senseless violence, Malcolm
Vaughn's life is ripped away from him, leaving his wife and child
to make sense of the shattered existence that remains. Sarah, a lab
scientist and Malcolm's widow, retreats into herself, refusing to
return to work when even the most mundane activities require
enormous effort. Malcolm's son, Harry, just eight years old, goes
cold, detaching from the grief that is rippling around him.
Meanwhile, Vietnam vet Deckard Jones, Malcolm's best friend, is
forced to come to terms with yet another loss. Sarah, Harry, and
Deckard must each find a way to go on while everything around them
appears to be crumbling. Stunning and elegant, Singing Boy is a
richly drawn novel of mourning, remembrance, and recovery, and a
nuanced look at three individuals' slow march toward healing.
Dennis McFarland's acclaimed debut novel, hailed by the New York
Times Book Review as "a rare pleasure . . . Remarkable from its
beginning to its surprising, satisfying end" Musician Marty
Lambert's life is already falling apart when he receives the phone
call that changes everything. His brother, Perry, has killed
himself in New York, and Marty-with his marriage on the rocks and
his record company sliding into insolvency-decides to leave San
Francisco to investigate exactly what went wrong. His trip sends
him headlong into the life his only brother left behind-his
pleasures and disappointments, his friends, his lovely girlfriend,
Jane-and finally, to the home they shared growing up in Virginia.
Along the way, through memories and dreams, Marty relives their
complicated upbringing as the children of talented, volatile
musicians and alcoholics. Through the tragedy, Marty finally faces
the demons of his past, ones he pretended he had buried long ago,
to emerge on the other side of grief, toward solace and a more
hopeful future.
"An irresistible tale that ventures into the ghostly realms of
psychology, personality and intimacy" from the bestselling author
of The Music Room (San Francisco Chronicle). When their daughter
leaves for college, newly minted empty nesters Cookson and Ellen
Selway decide to escape the eerie quiet of their home and take a
trip to London. But not long after arriving, it becomes apparent
that the Selways have traded one unsettling locale for another.
Like Cookson, a recovering alcoholic and drug addict, the Hotel
Willerton has a disturbing past. Fifty years ago, a young girl fell
to her death from one of the hotel's windows, and her ghost is
haunting Cookson, slowly drawing him back toward the darkness that
once consumed him. As Cookson descends into a spiral of
self-destruction, he is joined by two more apparitions, each
reflecting the worst parts of himself and forcing him to confront
the mistakes of his past that have tormented him for years. From
the celebrated author of the Washington Post Best Book of the Year
Nostalgia and the New York Times-bestselling The Music Room, this
is "a gripping, stylish, consistently entertaining novel" that
offers a literary spin on the traditional ghost story (The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution).
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