The Comb
Set in the Peace River Valley of northern Alberta, this novel follows the first-person voices of three women: a hungry and bombastic deaconess, a homesteading mother doubting her own mind, and a queer farm girl writing letters about calculus and kittens to her best friend and illicit lover. Each of...
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Format: | Text |
Language: | English |
Published: |
PDXScholar
2022
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Online Access: | https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/5922 https://doi.org/10.15760/etd.7793 https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/context/open_access_etds/article/6994/viewcontent/Henderson_psu_0180E_12923.pdf |
Summary: | Set in the Peace River Valley of northern Alberta, this novel follows the first-person voices of three women: a hungry and bombastic deaconess, a homesteading mother doubting her own mind, and a queer farm girl writing letters about calculus and kittens to her best friend and illicit lover. Each of these women reaches for supernatural forces to survive her constrained role in their rigid and isolated subarctic religious community. Their voices guide the story towards a failed Rapture and its aftermath, exploring eschatology, queerness, and translation, as well as the science and magic of environmental forces like swamp gases, ice roads, muskeg bogs, and aspen colonies. The story unspools in both epistolary and direct narrative, weaving Christian fundamentalism into magic realism and the mundane daily labors of women on the northern prairie in 1950. Only the first half of the novel appears in this thesis. |
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