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The Observer
- A Novel
- Narrated by: Alex Paxton-Beesley
- Length: 9 hrs and 22 mins
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Publisher's Summary
A spare and powerful new novel from the award-winning author of Good to a Fault and The Little Shadows.
When Julia arrives in Medway, accompanying her beloved Hardy on his first posting as an RCMP constable, she tries to explain her new life to old friends from the city, but can find no shared vocabulary to convey this rural reality, let alone police life. As Hardy disappears into long days at work, Julia takes a job as editor of the local newspaper, the Observer. Interviewing people to compose a view of the town each week, she gathers knowledge of the community’s surface joys and sorrows; meanwhile, Hardy is immersed in violence and loss, and Julia can only witness his increasing exhaustion. At first this new life together is an adventure, but as in all the best stories, time darkens and deepens it.
Grounded in Marina Endicott’s own experience in Mayerthorpe, Alberta, The Observer is an essential story from one of our most beloved storytellers. Endicott writes with the sure pacing and insight of a master novelist, piecing haunting details into a quietly devastating revelation of the fragility of life and law in a tightknit community.
What the critics say
“A taut psychological drama. . . . With powerful prose . . . [Endicott] sagely employs the semi-detached tools of fiction to relay first-hand the trials, tribulations and exigencies of an embattled couples’ storied life. . . . This gripping novel is . . . typical of [Endicott’s] fluent mastery.” —Winnipeg Free Press
“I loved this quiet, meditative book. . . . [The Observer] is a novel about light in the darkness . . . about hope amidst the harshness of reality, and about how sometimes all it ever takes to keep going is the miracle of just one good thing.” —Pickle Me This
"Powerful and impressive. . . . [Endicott] has rightly earned her place in the upper ranks of Canadian letters, and The Observer will only add to that reputation. . . . The Observer is a quiet book, a small book that sneaks up on you, insinuating itself in your heart before it bursts at its seams, that grows to envelop the extremities of human experience, rending them with a powerful grace and beauty. . . . In the hands of a master writer like Endicott, this small life sings.” —Toronto Star