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A CERTAIN SLANT OF LIGHT by Cynthia Thayer

A CERTAIN SLANT OF LIGHT

by Cynthia Thayer

Pub Date: Aug. 1st, 2000
ISBN: 0-312-26132-2
Publisher: St. Martin's

A lyrical tale of piety and grace as fostered by the simple life in rural Maine.

During a brutal ice storm, what Peter thinks is a ghost at the end of his drive turns out to be the very real—and pregnant—Elaine Sinclair. Peter is a self-created hermit living on the Maine coast in a one-room cabin, subsistence farming and herding his sheep. This prosaic life, however, is haunted by memories of his wife and children, who died in a fire years earlier—memories so powerful that he keeps a dollhouse and repositions his proxy family on a daily basis. When Elaine arrives, he begrudgingly takes her in for the night, then finds that the frail, pale woman is a match for him in inner strength: she refuses to leave. A faithful Jehovah’s Witness, she’s running from her husband and feels that Peter’s homestead is the perfect place for her to gather the wisdom to decide what to do about her marriage and coming baby—who may require a blood transfusion upon birth, though, even if so, Elaine will forbid it for religious reasons. Second-novelist Thayer (Strong for Potatoes, 1998) creates characters here that conform to their circumstances—Peter weakened from years of isolation, Elaine so devout she’s blind to any resistance. Days turn into weeks, and soon Peter finds comfort in Elaine, accepts the fact that she will stay until the baby is born, and begins to find a new lease on life. Elaine cooks, helps with the gardening, and prays for her unborn child. Though her dilemma provides impetus for the tale, it’s Peter’s metamorphoses that give it momentum as he begins to play his bagpipes again and finally confronts the sins that he feels contributed to his family’s death.

Immersed in the daily rituals and small life-and-death struggles of the farm, a story that emerges as a quiet testament to the powers of faith and forgiveness.