Burning Ground by Pearl Luke

Burning Ground

Pearl Luke

Working in a fire tower in the Canadian woods, Percy Turner’s emotional state is hanging on by a thread. Fires smolder within her–the lifelong passion she feels for a female friend, and her troubled family past. When Percy discovers an underground fire, she abandons her post and sets off on a quest to bring herself face-to-face with fires both within and without.

—-

From Publishers Weekly

A young woman at the isolated Envy River Tower keeps perpetual watch over the Canadian forest for signs of fire while exploring inner landscapes of memory and desire. Percy Turner, working alone in a forest service station for the seventh summer in a row, is plagued by emotional ambivalence and turmoil. She pursues an e-mail infatuation with a ranger whose voice on the daily radio reports intrigues her, but she does so mostly to distract herself from her obsessive, lifelong love for her childhood friend, Marlea. Though the two have been lovers off and on for years, Marlea’s current relationship with a man creates clashes all around. Percy must also try to come to terms with the complicated madness of her deeply religious mother: suffering a breakdown after Percy’s birth, she stood ‘by the side of the only highway into town with a placard reading: TAKE THIS CHILD OF THE DEVIL.’ Much of the book occurs in flashbacks set in the trailer park where the girls grew up; Luke frankly explores adolescent desire, including Percy’s earliest fumblings with Marlea and a sadomasochistic affair with an older male neighbor. As an adult, Percy’s sexuality is still ambiguous, mysterious even to her. The image of subterranean fire detailed in the book’s prologue is a recurring theme, and although the metaphor may be too obvious for some ‘Hell is everywhere,’ Percy notes Luke manages not to overdo it. This debut, published last year in Canada to critical praise, skillfully layers its many conflicts into a haunting and memorable whole.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

–This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

Priscilla ‘Percy’ Turner is isolated from the world for half the year whenever she returns to Envy River Fire Tower, deep in the forest of northern Alberta. For the seventh year, she will spend April through September in a cabin whose tap water comes from a rain barrel below the eaves, near a generator shed, an outhouse, and a 100-foot tower she must climb several times a day. In the tower’s cupola she scans for smoke from fires that can smolder underground undetected, then surface and quickly spread. Hidden fire is also what she feels for lifelong friend Marlea, who is with a man but wanders into Percy’s arms on occasion. Their childhood friendship flashes back to Percy as she recalls her distant mother, who tried to give her away, claiming she was the devil’s child and hurting her so deeply that later understanding of postpartum depression can’t assuage her. When Percy does sight smoke, she sets off to confront the fires that threaten the forest and those that threaten her inner being. Whitney Scott

Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved –This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


Check for it on:


Details

ISBN 452282675
Genre Award Winner; Fiction
Copyright Date 2000
Publication Date 01-Sep-01
Publisher Plume
Format Trade Paperback
No. of Pages 256
Award Short-listed for the Chapters/Robertson Davies prize for best unpublished first novel (Under the title Black & White Like Smoke) (1999); Globe & Mail notable book of the year (2000); Short-listed for the Georges Bugnes award for best novel (2001); Short-listed for Canadian Booksellers’ Libris award for first time author of the year (2001); 2001 Commonwealth Prize for Best First Novel (Canada and Caribbean region)
Language English
Rating Great
Award Short-listed for the Chapters/Robertson Davies prize for best unpublished first novel (Under the title Black & White Like Smoke) (1999); Globe & Mail notable book of the year (2000); Short-listed for the Georges Bugnes award for best novel (2001); Short-listed for Canadian Booksellers’ Libris award for first time author of the year (2001); 2001 Commonwealth Prize for Best First Novel (Canada and Caribbean region)
BookID 1588

Author: LFWBooks