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Fiction World War Ii

Saltbox Olive, The

by (author) Angela Antle

Publisher
Breakwater Books Ltd.
Initial publish date
May 2025
Category
World War II, Literary, Historical
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781778530517
    Publish Date
    May 2025
    List Price
    $24.95
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781778530524
    Publish Date
    May 2025
    List Price
    $22.95

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Description

Through the as-yet-untold story of Newfoundland soldiers in Italy during the Second World War, The Saltbox Olive is an evocative tale of the complex interactions between past and present, told through one woman’s search for the truth of her family’s mysterious past.

Caroline Fisher sets out to solve the mystery of why her grandfather burned his brother Arch’s wartime letters. The Saltbox Olive follows the wartime route of Arch, Tombstone, Slade, and Garl, members of the 166th British Army (Newfoundland) Artillery Regiment. After surviving the battles of the Sangro and Cassino, they are all but forgotten by British HQ in the mountains between Florence and Bologna, where war loses all semblance of logic, where their loyalties are tested, and where they encounter acts of brutality, revenge, and loneliness. Weaving their stories with those of Caroline and Min Fisher, war photographer Barbara Kerr, and partisan Lucia Capponi and her son Cosimo, The Saltbox Olive explores the role of individual responsibility in wartime, how photography influences our understanding of truth, and how sins committed in times of duress as well as declarations of love can ripple outward for generations. The Saltbox Olive is about the connections of the past to the present and the conflict between the simple truths we desperately crave, and life’s complex realities.

About the author

Angela Antle is a writer, artist, and documentary maker based in St. John’s, Newfoundland. Her debut novel, The Saltbox Olive, follows the 166th British Army (Newfoundland) Artillery Regiment through Italy. The novel explores the role of individual responsibility in wartime, how photography influences our understanding of truth, and how sins committed in times of duress—but also declarations of love—can ripple outward for generations. Antle’s writing has appeared in The Smallwood Letters (MUP 2024), Riddle Fence, Newfoundland Quarterly, and CBC.ca. She wrote and directed Gander’s Ripple Effect: How a Small Town’s Kindness Opened on Broadway, and wrote the feature-length Irish-Norwegian-Canadian documentary Atlantic: What Lies Beneath. Narrated by Brendan Gleeson, it was the winner of best documentary awards at the Dublin, Wexford, Nickel, and Chagrin Film Festivals. As a journalist, Angela has rowed a dory through the Narrows, covered the subculture of Florida’s Spring Break, taken bumpy komatik rides on the coast of Labrador, hitchhiked from France to Newfoundland on a fishing boat, interviewed a Prime Minister on Broadway, and recorded Ron Hynes singing “Sonny’s Dream” in Ireland. She is an interdisciplinary PhD candidate at Memorial University and a member of Norway’s Empowered Futures Energy School.

Angela Antle's profile page