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Time is a river  Cover Image Book Book

Time is a river / Mary Alice Monroe. --.

Summary:

"Mia Landon travels to a mountain sanctuary in North Carolina, while she begins her recovery from breast cancer. There, in the cabin at Watkins Glenn, Mia discovers the long lost journal of a well-known fly-fisherwoman from the 1920s, Kate Watkins. Reading this journal coaxes an otherwise withdrawn Mia from her shell and gives her the desire to reconnect with the world around her. Enthralling, heartwarming, and moving, this novel captures the complexity of human connections - to the natural world, to each other, and to one's self."--Publisher.

Record details

  • ISBN: 1439141770 (pbk.)
  • ISBN: 9781416544364
  • ISBN: 1416544364
  • ISBN: 9781439141779 (pbk.)
  • Physical Description: ix, 369 p ; cm.
  • Edition: 1st Pocket Books hardcover ed. --
  • Publisher: New York ; Pocket Books, 2008.

Content descriptions

Target Audience Note:
All Ages.
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 28.99
Subject: Women fishers > Fiction.
Fly fishing > Fiction.
Murder > Investigation > Fiction.
Breast > Cancer > Patients > Fiction.
North Carolina > Fiction.
Genre: Diary fiction.
Domestic fiction.
Fishing stories.
Psychological fiction.
Diary fiction.
General

Available copies

  • 5 of 5 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Radium Hot Springs Public Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 5 total copies.

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2008 July #1
    Breast cancer survivor Mia Landan returns home to find her husband in bed with another woman. Still weak from the cancer treatments, and not ready to make decisions about her failed marriage, Mia asks Belle Carson, a fly-fishing guide and the head of Casting for Recovery, if she can stay in Belle's isolated mountain cabin. At first, the solitude isn't easy, and Mia has to overcome some major fears. Her real healing begins after she discovers the long-forgotten diary of Kate Watkins, a controversial woman ahead of her time, who used to live in the cabin. Kate loved fly-fishing, too, and, guided by her journal, Mia begins to get in touch with the mountains, the wildlife, the river, and herself. A broken woman rediscovers her sense of self-worth in this moving work by a writer known for her lyrical writing style and love of the environment (The Four Seasons, 2004). Monroe once again treats her readers to lush descriptions of nature in this exquisite, many-layered novel of an unsolved mystery, an obsession, a reconciliation, and a little romance. Copyright 2008 Booklist Reviews.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2008 May #1

    After losing her job and her self-confidence, Mia Landan, a thirtysomething breast cancer survivor from Charleston, SC, finds her way to Casting for Recovery, a North Carolina-based organization run by fishing guide Belle Carson. Mia also loses her husband when she finds him casting about with another woman, and she seeks refuge in Belle's old family cabin. Along with the rigors of breast cancer treatment, readers learn about the ancient art of fly-fishing and how its principles can help replenish the soul and bring nature and a person's place in it into relief. Mia's time in the cabin makes her look at her damaged body as a symbol of her self-worth, not merely as a sign of weakness and failure. She even manages to flirt and eventually find love with a fellow fly-fisher. But this latest title from Monroe (Swimming Lessons ) is also a mystery, as Mia tries to piece together the life of Kate Watkins, Belle's late grandmother and a well-known fly-fisher, who lived in the cabin many years before. The truth is unearthed by Mia and a group of strong local women who decide that men need not have the last word, even when the conversation is about fishing. This fascinating, nicely wrought novel will be popular in public libraries even where readers don't know a brook trout from a can of sardines. Highly recommended.—Bette-Lee Fox, Library Journal

    [Page 57]. Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2008 March #1

    Monroe delivers another novel of strong Southern women, and though this one has its share of weak moments, the author's love for her characters is palpable throughout. Mia Landan, a cancer survivor, returns to Charleston after a fly-fishing retreat and finds her husband in bed with another woman. Shocked, Mia rushes back to the mountains where she'd been fishing and seeks the help of fly fisherman Belle Carson, who offers her the use of a ramshackle cabin for the summer. Upon Mia's first trip into town, she learns why the cabin looks like it hasn't been opened in years—it's where Kate Watkins, Belle's grandmother, allegedly murdered her lover. But after Mia conveniently finds Kate's diary tucked away in the cabin, she becomes determined to get to the bottom of things, despite Belle's warnings not to stir up the mud. Through a series of occasionally contrived diary entries, flashbacks and folksy recollections from locals, the narrative juxtaposes Kate's story with Mia's self-discovery, and while the predictable ending results from implausibly convenient plot twists, Monroe's fans will still enjoy the author's spin on love, mystery and the power of self-determination. (July)

    [Page 25]. Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.

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