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Table of Contents
About The Book
It’s 1961, and Mary Alice (Tink) Parker lives with her parents in a Vancouver suburb where many fathers are traumatized veterans of the Second World War and almost all the mothers are housewives. They believe they’ve earned secure and prosperous lives after the sacrifices they made during the war. But under the conformist veneer seethe conflicts and secrets that make the serenity of Grouse Valley precarious.
This is the story of the unravelling of a neighbourhood. It’s told by Tink, an eccentric child who is funny, observant, and impossibly nosy, who has an unnerving tendency to blurt whatever’s on her mind. Bucolic at first, the story darkens as McCarthy-era paranoia infects the adults and spills over into the lives of the children. The parents of Tink’s best friend Norman are schoolteachers with leftist beliefs. When the Cuban Missile Crisis threatens, Norman’s parents face a witch hunt while the boy becomes a target of bullies. Tink does her best to defend Norman. But as she looks for help, she stumbles on a web of secrets that triggers events beyond anyone’s control. Gripping and perceptive, the novel portrays a divided era with eerie similarities to our own.
Excerpt
My father, Hall Parker, often withdrew to his workshop, which was built into the unfinished back end of the basement. The floor and the back wall were concrete, and pushed up against the rough wall was a workbench my father had built himself. The work surface was a wide slab of wood that Uncle Punk got for him at one of the mills, and its four iron legs were salvaged from a broken-down conveyer belt.
My father was a tall man who looked even taller in the basement. He had a slight stoop and wore black-rimmed Clark Kent glasses, and I thought both of these came from his job in the local railway headquarters over town. He said he was a bookkeeper but my mother called him an accountant, and she liked to say the Parkers were early settlers in the province who had once owned canneries and timber concessions. My father was older than most of the other fathers in our suburb, but he was popular, and always ready to fix anybody’s car. People waved when they saw him, which made me proud, although it was also understood that Hall Parker—everybody called him by both names—Hall Parker had his moods.
My father usually went into his workshop on weekends, but sometimes he went there straight after work, not even coming in the kitchen but going directly through the basement. Those were the times I had to leave his dinner on a stool outside his workshop. It didn’t have a door, and when I put down his plate, he would keep his back to me and push things around on his workbench as if he didn’t know I was there. I tiptoed, but that was politeness, too. It was because of the war, my mother said. But my father wasn’t usually like that.
I was the youngest in the family and the only one at home. …I was born quite a long time after my father got back from overseas, where he had been a captain in the artillery. My parents named me Mary Alice but everybody called me Tink.
Product Details
- Publisher: ECW Press (October 24, 2023)
- Length: 304 pages
- ISBN13: 9781770416376
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Raves and Reviews
“With the charming and very funny nine-year-old Tink, Krueger has created an unforgettable character whose innocent curiosity busts through the societal conventions of early 1960s Canada. This is a masterful depiction of an atmosphere tense with fear and fuelled by grown-up transgressions, where adult morality is contaminated by politics that tear communities apart.” — Sheila Murray, author of Finding Edward
“The character of Tink is especially well-drawn as she observes much and understands little...This engrossing book sets the simplicity of friendship between two children against a framework of international politics.” — Historical Novel Society
“Far Creek Road is a wonderfully written novel, with full and rich characters, a delightful narrator, and very much the adult version of those Judy Blume stories we loved as kids...The background politics are skillfully written in the way so many of us experienced the world as kids: these things were happening and leaked into our lives in ways we didn’t entirely understand. It was a treat to be able to kick off my reading year with Far Creek Road out of the gate.” — STARRED REVIEW, The Miramichi Reader
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- Book Cover Image (jpg): Far Creek Road Trade Paperback 9781770416376