Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Fiction Gothic

Winter Willow

Stories

by (author) Deborah-Anne Tunney

Publisher
Great Plains Publications
Initial publish date
Nov 2019
Category
Gothic, General, Contemporary Women
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781773370255
    Publish Date
    Nov 2019
    List Price
    $21.95

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

Melanie, a young graduate student, is grieving the loss of her mother and main support system when she discovers that her PhD funding has been cancelled. Then she meets Stone, owner of Winter Willow, an old mansion in her neighbourhood, and is offered a position as his personal assistant. Moving in with him during that snowy and isolating season not only creates a strange sleepiness that makes it difficult for Melanie to concentrate on her studies, but also serves to disrupt the life and routine of Stone and his housekeeper, Celeste. When Melanie begins a relationship with a fellow grad student, she is confronted with the choice between a future with him and her life at Winter Willow. This novel explores the moment when a life can change, the pivot upon which the future depends

About the author

Deborah-Anne Tunney is a short story writer, novelist, and poet and is the author of The View from the Lane and Other Stories and the novel Winter Willow.

Deborah-Anne Tunney's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"The book is replete with insights about memory and art, and offers rich rewards to the reader" -Frances Boyle, The New Quarterly

"Deborah-Anne Tunney's Winter Willow is a sustained note of subdued tension, a gentle haunting, a wholly immersive story about what we lose and what we create" - PRISM International

"Winter Willow is an intriguing, compelling and thought-provoking debut novel . . . The descriptions of relentless snow and of Stone's lovely but doomed old house and garden, along with the beautiful writing, make this a fine and memorable novel." - Sonia Tilson, author of The Monkey Puzzle and The Disappearing Boy

"The story's eerie and atmospheric setting is exploited to stunning effect." - The Miramichi Reader

Related lists