• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Atlantic Books and Authors

Atlantic Books

Atlantic Books

Locate me to show me local book sellers and libraries

Locate me
Locate me
  • 0
FR
  • Home
  • Collections
    • Winter Reading
      • Winter Brain Ticklers
      • Winter Heartwarmers
      • Winter Snuggles
    • Holiday Gift Guide
      • The Gift Of Art Stories
      • The Gift Of Historical Stories
      • The Gift Of Human Stories
      • The Gift Of Literary Stories
      • The Gift Of True Stories
      • The Gift of Youthful Stories
    • VOICES
      • Indigenous Voices
      • Black Atlantic Canadian Authors and Stories
    • Time to
      • Time To Be Inspired
      • Time To Create
      • Discover
      • Time to DIY
      • Time to Escape
      • Time to Indulge
      • Time to Laugh
      • Time to Learn
      • Time to Lire en Français
      • Time to Meet
      • Time to Read Alone
      • Time to Read Together
  • Stories
  • Shop
  • About
  • Contact Us

rural

March 19, 2018 by Laurie Burns

Here So Far Away is written by award-winning YA author Hadley Dyer. The novel is set in the early 1990s and is centred around George (she goes by her middle name), a typical misunderstood teenager just trying to escape her mundane existence. She is living in a small town “where bean sprouts were still considered an ethnic food” and is itching to graduate and leave town, and to not end up like her parents.

The precious edge of adulthood just around the corner, George is often misunderstood, lonely and isolated by her too-earnest nature. She ends up driving most of her friends away, subsequently falling for an older guy who moves to town, someone who she believes “gets her” even as she pretends to be years older than her age. She imagines herself as an adult having grown up conversations where she doesn’t mispronounce words, a timewhere everything is better, just by being with him. George has to learn who she is and how to stand on her own feet. We read as she experiences her first pangs of love, how to balance this newfound feeling with friendship and the loss of friends she thought she knew.

The story has many layers, including her depressed and injured father, a lovely friendship with an elderly man and a sweet brother with an adorable Victorian disposition. The novel can be heavy at times and might be best suited for older teenagers or adults.

Dyer writes with an authentic voice, like she has captured the very tortured soul of being a teenage girl, deep with distraught when everything feels so helpless. Her characters are real and occasionally shocking with their cattiness and self-hatred. Any reader can relate to the yearning to just be different, to just grow up, to finally escape the mundanity of adolescence.

The writing is often very witty, yet Dyer goes for the jugular and in the end creates a heartbreaking novel dealing with secrets, loss and the mess that arises from not living truthfully.

Here So Far Away
Hadley Dyer
HarperCollins

Filed Under: Fiction, Reviews, Young Readers Reviews Tagged With: 1990s, family, fiction, Friendship, Outcasts, rural, Small Town, Teen Angst, Underdogs, YA, young adult fiction

August 8, 2016 by Sandra Phinney

Blank bookcover with clipping path

You’ve met oddballs before; you’ll meet them again in Bruce Graham’s latest book. They are addicts, busy-bodies and ne’er-do-wells ­– part of the woof and warp of rural Nova Scotia. The quirky thing is that in spite of being hopelessly weir and exasperating, they are also wonderfully human and full of heart. They are you and me – a reflection of who we are as Atlantic Canadians. This is Graham’s gift.

The characters give us a chance to laugh at ourselves. In the process, we can let our hair down, step back, and make some mental shifts. And, the twisted title comes to carry more weight and meaning than seems apparent at first glance.

Set in Parrsboro, NS, this witty yarn is laced with delightful dialogue, charming (and maddening) characters, and moves along at a fast clip. It’s a layered story with redemption as the main theme that doesn’t wallow in righteousness or self-pity.

What a Friend We Have in Gloria
By Bruce Graham
$19.95, paperback, 176 pp.
Pottersfield Press, 2016

Filed Under: Fiction, Reviews Tagged With: Bruce Graham, Nova Scotia, Parrsboro, Pottersfield Press, rural, What a Friend We Have in Gloria

October 7, 2014 by Chris Benjamin

Crimes Against My Brother David Adams RichardsEarly in David Adams Richards’ latest novel, his narrator notes that his three strong, male, blue-collar rural protagonists are “smarter, more resilient and more joyful” than his middle-class, left-leaning students. He proceeds to paint a vivid picture of these men’s bleak lives, deceptions, personal and moral failings, and how they’re interwoven with the collusion of government and a multinational forestry corporation that kills their hometown. The resulting robberies, domestic abuse, death by ignorance, death by murder, death by self-defence, and suicide eventually drive these men, once blood-oath atheists, back to God, but in desperation and guilt rather than joyful exaltation.

Through his academic narrator Richards attacks every significant event repeatedly, from multiple perspectives, each character’s fall – his insecurities and rationalizations of faults and misdeeds as he succumbs to the power of fate’s butterfly effect – refracted in a house of mirrors and amplified by rumours, which ultimately “destroy them all.”

 

Crimes Against My Brother
by David Adams Richards, $32.95 (hc)
9780385671163, 416 pp.
Doubleday Canada, May 2014

Filed Under: #77 Holiday/History, Editions Tagged With: Academia, Chris Benjamin, Crimes Against My Brother, David Adams Richards, Doubleday Canada, God, New Brunswick, rural, suicide, violence, Working Class

Primary Sidebar

Our Latest Edition

Fall 2020

DISCOVER

Get Our Newsletters

Sign up to the Read Atlantic newsletters

Subscribe to one or all three of our carefully curated newsletters: Atlantic Books, Fiction and Poetry.

SUBSCRIBE

Footer

Atlantic Books

AtlanticBooks.ca is your source for Atlantic Canadian books. Stay up to date with the latest books news, feature stories, and reviews, and browse our catalogue of local books where you can download samples, borrow digital books from your local library, or purchase them through local book sellers or publishers.

Facebook
Twitter

#ReadAtlantic

Atlantic Books is part of the #ReadAtlantic community, which brings together Atlantic Canadian authors, bookstores, publishers, libraries, readers, literary festivals, and more. We encourage you to use this hashtag to promote all the ways we can support the local literary landscape in Atlantic Canada.

 

Useful Links

  • Subscribe to Atlantic Books newsletters
  • Find Your Atlantic Book Seller
  • Find Your Atlantic Public Library
  • Terms of Service
  • Return Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • My Account
  • My wishlist

With Thanks

We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund for this project, as well as the Province of Nova Scotia’s Department of Communities, Culture and Heritage.

Copyright © 2021 · Atlantic Books All Rights Reserved

  • Subscribe to Atlantic Books newsletters
  • Find Your Atlantic Book Seller
  • Find Your Atlantic Public Library
  • Terms of Service
  • Return Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • My Account
  • My wishlist