Fiction
Bestselling novelist David Bergen follows his Scotiabank Giller
Prize—winning
The Time in Between with a haunting novel about the
clash of generations — and cultures.
In 1973, outside of
Kenora, Ontario, Raymond Seymour, an eighteen-year-old Ojibway boy, is
taken by a local policeman to a remote island and left for dead.
A year later, the Byrd family arrives in Kenora. They have come to stay
at “the Retreat,” a commune run by the self-styled guru Doctor Amos. The
Doctor is an enigmatic man who spouts bewildering truisms, and who
bathes naked every morning in the pond at the edge of the Retreat while
young Everett Byrd watches from the bushes. Lizzy, the eldest of the
Byrd children, cares for her younger brothers Fish and William, and
longs for what she cannot find at the Retreat. When Lizzy meets Raymond,
everything changes, and Lizzy comes to understand the real difference
between Raymond’s world and her own. A tragedy and a love story, the
novel moves towards a conclusion that is both astonishing and
heartbreaking.
Set during the summer of the Ojibway occupation of
Anicinabe Park in Kenora,
The Retreat is a finely nuanced, deeply
felt novel that tells the story of the complicated love between a white
girl and a native boy, and of a family on the verge of splintering
forever. It is also a story of the bond between two brothers who were
separated in childhood, and whose lives and fates intertwine ten years
later.
A brilliant portrait of a time and a place,
The
Retreat confirms Bergen’s reputation as one of the country’s
most gifted and compelling writers.