10%OFF

Stock image for illustration purposes only - book cover, edition or condition may vary.
Brown Dwarf
K. D. Miller
€ 16.99
€ 15.22
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for Brown Dwarf
Paperback. Returning to her childhood home in Hamilton, Brenda Bray must finally face up to her youthful friendship with Jori, a classmate who disappeared after they sought to track and catch an escaped serial killer believed to be hiding out on the escarpment. Num Pages: 144 pages. BIC Classification: FA. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 190 x 133 x 8. Weight in Grams: 194.
When Brenda Bray, better known to the world as Rae Brand, the author of the popular "Elsinor Grey Mystery Series", returns home to Hamilton, she is set upon by vivid memories of the summer of 1962 when she struck up an intense relationship with a classmate, and together they sought to track and catch an escaped serial killer believed to be hiding out on the escarpment. Brenda and Jori search for this elusive murderer, their friendship twisting as the summer proceeds, becoming tautly fantastic and pre-adolescently sexual, eventually resulting in real tragedy. As the story of that summer unravels it becomes apparent that the headlines about Jori's disappearance only touch on the truth, and that Brenda must finally face up to that summer friendship and its results if she is going to discover any peace. Unputdownable, "Brown Dwarf" is an intense and thrilling psychological drama.
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2010
Publisher
Biblioasis Canada
Number of pages
144
Condition
New
Number of Pages
144
Place of Publication
Emeryville, Canada
ISBN
9781897231883
SKU
V9781897231883
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15
About K. D. Miller
Kathleen Daisy Miller: K. D. Miller is the author of two previous short story collections, Give me Your Answer and Litany on a Time of Plague, and an essay collection, Holy Writ. Her work has twice been collected in The Journey Prize Anthology and Best Canadian Stories, and she has been nominated for a National Magazine Award for Fiction. She lives and writes in Toronto.
Reviews for Brown Dwarf
Miller uses the conventions of the detective novel but is concerned with more than just the bare-bones question of whodunit. Although she remains under-appreciated, she is one of Canada's finest writers, able to probe deeper into the human heart than the best surgeon. Here, as in her earlier stories, Miller's concern is with why people do what they do rather than just what they do. Miller has a keen sense for how mixed all human motives are, how closely aligned love and hate can be and how deceiving others always involves a bit of self-deception. -The National Post There are several ways to pen a story concerning young girls and criminal acts. One method: treat it lightly, a la Alan Bradley's Flavia de Luce mysteries, playing the crime as an old-fashioned puzzler. Another technique: follow K.D. Miller's example in Brown Dwarf and examine the more serious ramifications of such events. In her debut novel, Miller eschews a "sepia-tinted past that smells of lavender and old books," and instead focuses on the ways in which youthful decisions result in untold damage. -Quill and Quire In the wee hours of this morning, unable to put the book down, I read the last few chapters of K.D. Miller's novel, Brown Dwarf. Miller expertly builds and maintains the tension in this concise psychological drama until the very end.-New Quarterly