From the Inside Flap
For David Adams Richards, blood ties is not merely a figure of speech, but an assertion of the reality of life in small-town Canada, where blood ties people in countless, almost unknowable ways to friends, community, and landscape. The lives of three generations of MacDurmots form a Miramichi Valley family portrait that is beguiling, insightful, witty, and tender. Employing dazzling angles of vision and fast-shifting perspectives, Richards captures the inner lives of his characters with sympathy and understanding.
About the Author
David Adams Richards was born in Newcastle, New Brunswick, in 1950. He has published ten acclaimed novels, including the award-winning Miramichi trilogy –
Nights Below Station Street, winner of the 1988 Governor General’s Award;
Evening Snow Will Bring Such Peace (1990), winner of the Canadian Authors Association Award; and
For Those Who Hunt the Wounded Down (1993), winner of the Thomas Raddall Award –
Hope in the Desperate Hour (1996),
The Bay of Love and Sorrows (1998), and, most recently,
Mercy Among the Children (2000), co-winner of the prestigious Giller Prize. In 1993, Richards received the Canada-Australia Prize.
Richards has also published three non-fiction books, most recently the Governor General’s Award-winning fishing memoir
Lines on the Water (1998), and has written Gemini Award-winning screenplays for the CBC-TV adaptations of his novels
For Those Who Hunt the Wounded Down and
Nights Below Station Street. “Small Gifts,” his original screenplay for CBC-TV, won a Gemini Award and the New York International Film Festival Award for Best Script.
Richards now lives in Toronto with his wife, Peggy, and their two sons.
From the Hardcover edition.