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Fiction General

Clock of Heaven, The

by (author) Dian Day

Publisher
Inanna Publications & Education Inc.
Initial publish date
Oct 2008
Category
General, Women's Studies, Family Life
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780980882223
    Publish Date
    Oct 2008
    List Price
    $22.95

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Description

The Clock of Heaven explores issues of identity and of hope through its protagonist, Esa Withrod, an intelligent, educated young woman who is also the unwanted child of dysfunctional parents. The only bright spot in Esa's childhood was the three months she spent with her grandmother in a house by the sea (in the Maritimes) when she was seven years old. Now she is a young woman struggling over recent events in her personal life--a failed first relationship and resulting pregnancy--as well as with the legacy of her desolate upbringing. Esa is an unusual character--extremely competent but socially withdrawn and unable to establish ordinary relationships with the people around her. Her childhood has prepared her to deal with the world with endurance and resilience, but not with joy. She remains "mystified by kindness." Searching for that safe haven she knew as a child, she returns to her grandmother's house to find that it is not possible to go back. Through a spring and summer of traumatic events in what has been her family's homestead, she discovers the love of family, friendship, and the best of what people in a small community have to offer each other in times of difficulty.

About the author

Dian Day has worked as a reporter, counsellor, researcher, teacher, and artist. She holds an M.A. in Sociology and is the recipient of numerous academic awards. Dian has been writing fiction and poetry all of her life, beginning with an illustrated book entitled My Friend Robin, written in grade two. In the late 1990s, for several years in a row, she placed in both poetry and short story categories at the Writer’s Federation of Nova Scotia Atlantic Writing Competition. In 1998, her short story "Scratching the Surface" was published in The Gaspereau Review. In 2000, she received an Arts Grant from the Regional Municipality of Ottawa-Carleton for beginning work on this novel. Dian currently lives in Ottawa, but will be moving to Nova Scotia shortly (as a child she spent all her summers in Newfoundland where her parents are from originally).

Dian Day's profile page