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Fritz Agency
Christian Dittus
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English
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PERDITA

Hilary Scharper

Historian Garth Hellyer is bemused when he is assigned to interview Marged Brice, a resident of Clarkson Home for The Aged as part of his work on the Longevity Project. Official records indicate that she is 134 years old, arousing suspicions of bureaucratic error or major fraud.

When Garth finally meets her, he is intrigued. Marged, looking as old as polished stone, her sharp mind occasionally drifting to reverie, tells him she wants to die but Perdita won't let her. Not too old to be charmed by Garth, she entrusts him with her journal which he takes with him to his cottage near the Cape Prius lighthouse of Marged's childhood.

This remote peninsula on the Great Lakes was a summer respite for the elite, including a renowned artist who may have been Marged's lover, and a prominent ornithologist whom Marged assisted. But Garth is also driven by his curiosity about Perdita, the name of the infant girl in Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale who is left on a seacoast to die but is rescued by shepherds.

Hilary Scharper masterfully constructs Marged's story set in the dawn of the 1900s and its impact on the unresolved issues in Garth's life, offering us a glorious romance of gothic and modern. Fans of Jane Eyre, Rebecca, and Possession will enjoy the rich pageant of conflicting passions, wild storms, and the mystery of the supernatural. Hilary Scharper spent a decade as a lighthouse keeper on the Bruce Peninsula with her husband. She also is the author of a story collection, Dream Dresses and God and Caesar at the Rio Grande (University of Minnesota Press) which won the Choice Outstanding Academic Book Award. She received her Ph.D. from Yale and is currently Associate Professor of Cultural Anthropology a the University of Toronto.
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Published 2013-04-01 by Simon & Schuster Canada

Comments

Canadian author Scharper (Dream Dresses) shines in this surprising and engaging gothic novel. (...) Scharper wraps up with a series of quirky twists readers won't see coming. Impeecably researched—Scharper is an associate professor of cultural anthropology at the University of Toronto and spent a decade as a lighthouse keeper on the Bruce Peninsula of Canada—and beautifully told, this is a tale that will stay with readers long after the final page is turned. (starred review) Read more...

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