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'Absorbing and original . . . A very smart tale packed with
jeopardy' Daily Mail 'Keeps you guessing till the very end' The
Times 'An absolute page-turner' Miranda Cowley Heller, author of
The Paper Palace He's in your house. He's in your family. Or is he
in your mind? Gil has been estranged from his sister ever since her
obnoxious son tried to drown his daughter on a family holiday.
That's Gil's interpretation; his sister thinks Matthew was just
playing around. Or did. When she and her husband perish in a car
crash, Gil becomes Matthew's legal guardian. Matthew is now an
urbane 17-year-old, raised on Manhattan's Upper East Side, a planet
away from rural Vermont, where Gil lives with his wife and
daughters, teaching at the local university. At first, Matthew
appears to have changed, but when he joins Gil's writing class, he
submits a story detailing the various ways a character resembling
Gil's youngest daughter might die. While Gil believes he has
invited a psychopath to live under his roof, the women in his life
are impressed by Matthew's intelligence and charm. Is Gil losing
his mind, or are his family in desperate danger?
A nephew. An uncle. A psychopath - but which of them is it? Gil
knows his nephew Matthew is dangerous. The signs were there early -
on a family holiday Gil's daughter was discovered nearly drowning
at the bottom of a swimming pool, while Matthew looked on from the
deck. Now seventeen, Matthew is orphaned when his parents die in a
car crash. He must leave his Upper East Side Manhattan life behind,
to live with Gil, his wife and daughters in rural Vermont. He is
insolent, bored, disconnected. At least that's Gil's take. To the
women in the family he is charming, intelligent, wry. But when he
disdainfully joins Gil's writing classes at the local university,
Matthew's fiction shows a vivid and macabre imagination spilling
onto the page. Matthew is clearly announcing his intentions to Gil,
taunting him before he does something awful to his family. But why
is Gil the only one who can see this? As Gil begins to follow
Matthew around, his own behaviour becomes increasingly unstable. Is
he losing his mind? Which of the two of them is likely to kill
someone?
What is the foundation of work that lasts? As Christians in a
hypermobile culture, most of the time we talk about going and
doing, about the need for meaningful action, service, and
pilgrimage. Here, we listen to a quieter call. We consider the
foundation, the roots, the bass note, that place of origin from
which the building rises and the fruit blooms and the music soars
and all the action comes-the place of stability. This call is
rooted in the being of God; the faithfulness, reliability, and
unchanging character of God. Drawing from some of the best writings
on Benedictine spirituality and from his personal experiences
raising a family, pastoring a church, and spending time living with
monks, Nathan Oates offers a compelling invitation to find inner
peace and stillness right where we are. When faced with decisions
to stay or go, we rarely consider a beautiful, challenging third
option-embracing the value of stability, which is moving closer to
the root. Rather than pulling up our tents or simply enduring, we
can choose to press deeper into the core of the question, to lean
into the source of life, the real need, the true passion.
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