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Bookseller recommendation
“This intriguing novel is written from a child's perspective where the world can be filled with perplexing and inexplicable phenomena. It is also told by an unidentified narrator at a family gathering - one of the children now grown up and looking back - and filled with confusing childhood perceptions and hazy memories. The adults are seldom even involved in the action and always seem to come across as inscrutable, negligent, and often ridiculous. When the youngest cousin disappears and the oldest– who had gone looking for her in the woods–also disappears, the children try to tell the adults, but they are ignored because they are too busy rehashing old family grievances. At times the atmospheric and menacing tale is reminiscent of Shirley Jackson’s writing or the darkest parts of the tales of Peter Pan, Wendy, and the Lost Boys. There’s a touch of magical realism - or is it just the overworked imaginations of the cousins? This is a novel that will immediately pull readers in and keep them reading in order to try to discover the truth.”
— Shirley • Watermark Books
On a New England morning in the late 1980s, a group of young cousins wander deep into the woods on their family’s property, drawn in by uncanny visions and the disappearance of one of their own—but the farther they go, the stranger their surroundings become.
Lingering at the edge of a family party, a troop of cousins loses track of the youngest child among them. With their parents preoccupied with bickering about decades-old crises, the children decide they must set out to investigate themselves—to the rickety chicken coop, the barn and its two troublesome horses, and into the woods that once comprised their late grandmother’s property. The more the children search, and the deeper they walk, the more threatening the woods become and the more lost they are, caught between their aunt’s home in the present day, their parents’ childhood home just through the trees, and the memory of the house their grandmother grew up in. Soon, what began as a quest for answers gives way to a journey that undermines everything they’ve been told about who they are, where they came from, and what they deserve.
Disquieting and delightful, Idle Grounds is a rich exploration of the interior lives of children and a gripping meditation on birthright, decline, and weight of family history. A fable of the distortions of privilege and the impossibility of keeping secrets hidden, this is a novel about straying from home—only to come back unraveled, unsettled, and irrevocably changed.
Krystelle Bamford’s work has appeared in The American Poetry Review, The Kenyon Review, bath magg, Under the Radar, The Scores, and numerous anthologies including the Best New British and Irish Poets 2019–2021. She is a 2019 Primers poet and was awarded a Scottish Book Trust New Writers Award. Raised in the US, she now lives in Edinburgh with her partner and children. Idle Grounds is her first novel.