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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In the deep woods of the Maine borderlands, the legend of huntsman Pete Landry is still told around cottage campfires to scare children, a tragic story of love, lust, and madness. During the early summer of 1967, inseparable teenage beauties Sissy Morgan and Zaza Mulligan wander among the vacation cottages in the community of Boundary, drinking and smoking and swearing, attracting the attention of boys and men. First one, and then the other, goes missing, and both are eventually found dead in the forest. Have they been the victims of freak accidents? Or is someone hunting the young women of Boundary? And if there is a hunter, who might be next? The Summer of Love quickly becomes the Summer of Fear, and detective Stan Michaud, already haunted by a case he could not solve, is determined to find out what exactly is happening in Boundary before someone else is found dead.

A story of deep psychological power and unbearable suspense, Andrée A. Michaud's award-winning Boundary is an utterly gripping read about a community divided by suspicion and driven together by primal terror.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 31, 2017
      Part coming of age story, part mystery, and part psychological thriller, Michaud’s tense 10th novel, which won a Canadian Governor-General’s Award when it was first published in 2014, recounts the story of a small lakeside summer community ravaged by the murder of two teenage girls in 1967. People in the community start to believe they are being tormented by the ghost of Pierre Landry, a trapper who lived in the woods around the lake and committed suicide 30 years before because he’d fallen in love with a woman who would not have him. The girls are found in his old traps. The community blames the girls for their own deaths: “It was thanks to their beauty and Maggie Harrison’s, and to that of all happy and desirable woman, that Pete Landry’s traps had emerged from the dark earth, and with them the violence of other men,” a leitmotif that recurs throughout the novel. The novel leans towards an investigation of the psychological effects of such events on both the community and the policemen investigating the case, an effort that is lost in the sometimes awkward translation. The book relies on stereotypical thriller tropes, ham-fisted foreshadowing, and obvious observations, but the final revelation still manages to surprise.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from May 15, 2017
      Quebec novelist Michaud (The River of Dead Trees, 2002, etc.) explores the devastating consequences of murder upon a close-knit community in this deeply psychological novel translated from the French.Boundary, an Edenic summer destination for families both American and French-Canadian, is haunted by the story of a trapper named Pete Landry, whose obsession with a local woman ended in tragedy. Years later, in 1967, Landry's legend lives on, and when two young women are savagely murdered, the vacationers fear that his ghost may still roam the woods and lakeshore. Chief Inspector Michaud, however, called in to investigate the crimes, knows that he is seeking flesh-and-blood evil. Can he and his officers uncover the truth before another girl dies? This is a novel about liminal spaces and liminal time: much of the action occurs in the evening and at night, and even the year in which it's set bridges the innocence and tumult of the 1960s. It's also a novel about coming-of-age: Andree, who narrates some of the novel, is a young girl teetering on the brink of becoming a young woman, and she both celebrates and fears this transition. Most of all, it is a dense and beautiful novel about the human condition. The deaths of the girls, Zaza and Sissy, form the foundation of the mystery, but the author deliberately explores all aspects of loss, grief, desire, guilt, maturation, and obsession, and her writing is lyrical and layered. There is something haunting and fairy-tale-like in the wild setting and in the characters who inhabit and fear it. While most crime novels put the murder center stage, this one instead uses the crime to deeply examine the complexity of what it means to be alive. The one odd note is Michaud's use of her own name for both the detective and the young narrator, for reasons that never become clear, but that's a small quibble. Spellbinding. This novel is no light read, and beneath its layers lies a vision profoundly rewarding, beautiful, and tragic.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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