Fleeing
from an imprisoning job and
a disintegrating marriage, Anthony
Hardman seeks refuge in a remote
house on the edge of a lonely
moor. Here, set free by the
liberating expanses of sky and
rock, he begins to discover
the co-existence of past and
present, and the strangeness
of remembered experience, in
the re-awakening of the bold
young climber he once was, finding
his fulfilment among the limestone
crags and gritstone edges.
Darker
memories, long suppressed, emerging
from his buried self, compel
him to re-examine the breakdown
of relations with his wife,
Elizabeth. Through his friendship
with a shepherd and his family,
above all with a feral child,
he begins to understand what
has been lacking in his life.
Meanwhile, as he and Elizabeth
struggle to come to terms with
the unfinished business of their
marriage, a catastrophe is looming
which will have tragic consequences.
Set
among the hills and crags of
the Peak District, Roger Hubank’s
new novel explores the nature
of the ‘self ’,
its relationship with the sustaining
energies of the earth, and the
claims of other lives. Hubank’s
previous novel won a Special
Jury Award at the 2002 Banff
Festival, and, in 2001 his novel
Hazard
’s Way won the Grand
Prix at Banff and the Boardman
Tasker Award. |