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Disillusioned by the Vietnam War and their troubled pasts, Kate and Andy leave New York City for a remote Nova Scotia fishing village. In this barren place, they are swept into the rogue wave of change, a love triangle and a tragic accident. Shoal water is a treacherous place. Not out on the deep water, and not on land, it's in a place in between, full of unexpected hazards-submerged sandbars, diffracted waves, counter currents. Shoal Water is also the unflinching account of a woman's passage out of dependence into self-possession as she navigates dangerous waters and gains the power to redeem loss and find forgiveness.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Disillusioned by the Vietnam War and their troubled pasts, Kate and Andy leave New York City for a remote Nova Scotia fishing village. In this barren place, they are swept into the rogue wave of change, a love triangle and a tragic accident. Shoal water is a treacherous place. Not out on the deep water, and not on land, it's in a place in between, full of unexpected hazards-submerged sandbars, diffracted waves, counter currents. Shoal Water is also the unflinching account of a woman's passage out of dependence into self-possession as she navigates dangerous waters and gains the power to redeem loss and find forgiveness.
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Autorenporträt
Kip Robinson Greenthal, a graduate of Sarah Lawrence College, worked eighteen years as a librarian in schools and public libraries. In 1993, she founded and directed the award-winning Seattle Arts & Lectures' Writers in the Schools program. She was selected for the Jack Straw Writers Program and awarded a Hedgebrook residency. Her short story, "Tattoo Emporium," was published in Secret Histories: Stories of Courage, Risk, and Revelation, and another short story, "Stealing,"was selected by Elizabeth Austen to air on KUOW's On the Beat. Kip's first novel, Shoal Water, won the 2020 Landmark Prize for Fiction sponsored by Homebound Publications, to be published in Autumn 2021. Kip lives with her husband on Lopez Island, Washington.