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Cities of Refuge

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In Cities of Refuge, Michael Helm’s keenly anticipated new novel, a single act of violence resonates through several lives, connecting closeby fears to distant political terrors. At the story’s centre is the complex, intensely charged relationship between a 28-year-old woman and the father who abandoned her when she was young. 
           
One summer night on a side street in downtown Toronto, Kim Lystrander is attacked by a stranger. Thrown deep into turmoil, in the weeks and months that follow, she confronts her fear by returning to the night, in writing, searching for harbingers of the incident, and clues to the identity of her assailant. The attack also torments Kim's father, Harold, an historian of Latin America. As he investigates the crime on his own, the darkest hours from his past revisit him, and he gradually begins to unravel. Entwined in their story are Kim’s ailing mother, Marian; Father André Rowe, whose mission to guide others involves him in a decision with troubling consequences; Rodrigo Cantero, a young Colombian man, living illegally in the city; and Rosemary Yates, a woman whose faith-based belief in the duty to give asylum to any who seek it, even those judged guilty, draws Harold to her, before a fateful choice changes the future for them all.
           
Cities of Refuge is a novel of profound moral tension and luminous prose. It weaves a web of incrimination and inquiry, where mysteries live within mysteries, and stories within stories, and the power to save or condemn rests in the forces of history, and in the realm of our deepest longings.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from January 7, 2013
      The humanity that informed Helm’s previous novels, including The Projectionist, is again in evidence in this standout about the aftershocks of a brutal crime. Twenty-eight-year-old Kim Lystrander is riding her bike to her Toronto home after having dinner with her parents when she’s brutally attacked by a masked rapist, escaping with injuries both mental and physical. She resists plastic surgery to fix her nose, believing that its altered appearance should reflect her state of mind in the wake of the assault. Kim’s father suspects that the attack might be linked to his daughter’s work for an advocacy group for undocumented aliens, and Kim withdraws and retreats as much as possible, unable to engage even in identifying her assailant. If the general plot outline doesn’t break new ground, Helm’s often mournful prose does; one character looks at the future arc of his life and anticipates floating “for years toward... death like so much space junk destined for burning reentry.” The author’s facility in making Kim’s pain the reader’s own makes this a powerful depiction of the struggle to overcome adversity. Ellen Levine, Trident Media Group.

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  • English

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