The Fugitive Wife by Peter C. Brown: Book Cover

    The Fugitive Wife by Peter C. Brown

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    Average Customer Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 (3 ratings)

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    • Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
    • Pub. Date: January 2006
    • ISBN-13: 9780641906855
    • 400pp
    • Edition Description: Bargain

    Note: This is a bargain book and quantities are limited. Bargain books are new but may have slight markings from the publisher and/or stickers showing their discounted price. More about bargain books

     
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    Synopsis

    "All about passion, whether for….romance or adventure, this sweeping debut renders poetically the dynamics of desire."—Kirkus Reviews

    The year is 1900 in gold-prospecting Alaska. Essie, a Midwestern farm girl fleeing from a stormy marriage, joins up with prospectors bound for Nome, where the golden sands teem with dreamers, schemers, and high rollers. When Leonard, Essie's stubborn and volatile husband, travels north, astonishing scenes of pursuit, sacrifice, and crucial decision rise to a conclusion that is both surprising and inevitable. Powerfully evoking a past world and the variable territory of the heart, this novel establishes Peter C. Brown as a consummate storyteller. Reading group guide included.

    Publishers Weekly

    The 1900 gold rush to Nome, Alaska, sweeps up Esther (Essie) Crummey, the resilient and pragmatic title character of this evocative historical novel, Brown's promising debut. A Minnesota farm girl, Essie marries a drifter named Leonard Crummey, a volatile man burdened by a painful past. They begin a life together on their own fledgling farm, but the birth of a deformed son, Gabriel, and the devastation of their farm by a flood turn Leonard into a "hard husband." His alcoholism and unilateral decision to sell much of their land corrodes their marriage. After further disaster, Essie leaves. Headed for her sister's in Seattle, Essie helps in a dockside accident on a Nome-bound ship, an intervention through which she meets Nate Deaton, the earnest, East Coast-educated young foreman for the Cape Nome Company. He hires her for the Nome venture, and mutual respect and conversation draw them together despite their varied backgrounds. But a beleaguered, die-hard Leonard follows his wife to Nome, where he threatens the budding devotion between Nate and Essie. This is an eloquent, memorable first novel, with high-powered characters whose prickly exteriors, created out of the need to survive, hide affectingly yearning and haunted souls. (Jan.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

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    Biography

    Peter C. Brown's grandfather was a prospector, the engineer for a gold-mining company in Nome, Alaska. Brown is a retired business consultant, and he and his wife live in St. Paul, Minnesota.

    Customer Reviews

    Number of Reviews: 3
    Average Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5
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    Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 Storytelling At Its Finest
    Denise Sebesta Lanier (moonspeak@comcast.net) , A reviewer, 08/03/2008

    Don't get this book if your main goal is reading about Alaska--that's what nonfiction is for. Buy this book because you love a good, well-told story, because you're addicted to complex, complicated, compelling characters. The Fugitive Wife is a superior novel, wrought with some of the most gorgeous language being crafted in contemporary fiction. The fact that you get lots of juicy inside-info on the history of gold mining in Alaska at the turn of the century is icing on the cake of this pulse- pounding adventure. But the true adventure involves the life or death leaps of the human heart, the risk-taking of trusting your instincts, the thrill-ride of giving yourself over to love that answers back as selflessly as it's given. For the cover price of this book, you get in return a journey you'll never forget, with characters who will stay with you long after the last page is turned.

    Also recommended: Requiem, Mass, John Dufresne The Ha Ha, Dave King The Unthinkable Thoughts of Jacob Green, Joshua Braff

    Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 Great Read on Alaskan Frontier
    A reviewer (cwood@towson.edu) , a professor, 06/22/2008

    I too enjoyed this book, recommended to me by a bookstore owner whose opinion I trust. The plot moves along the characters are well-drawn,and the setting seems to be historically accurate. Furthermore, the ending is satisfying and not 'happily ever after.'

    Also recommended: Dancing at the Rascal Fair 'Ivan Doig', The Secret River

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