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$27.00

The Berry Pickers

Amanda Peters

Catapult, hb., 320 pp

The January 2024 pick from the Inky Phoenix, the book club from internationally known yoga teacher, author, and Charleston resident Kathryn Budig.

Blue Bicycle Books is proud to be the official bookstore partner of the Inky Phoenix!

About the book:

July 1962. A Mi’kmaq family from Nova Scotia arrives in Maine to pick blueberries for the summer. Weeks later, four-year-old Ruthie, the family’s youngest child, vanishes. She is last seen by her six-year-old brother, Joe, sitting on a favorite rock at the edge of a berry field. Joe will remain distraught by his sister’s disappearance for years to come.

In Maine, a young girl named Norma grows up as the only child of an affluent family. Her father is emotionally distant, her mother frustratingly overprotective. Norma is often troubled by recurring dreams and visions that seem more like memories than imagination. As she grows older, Norma slowly comes to realize there is something her parents aren’t telling her. Unwilling to abandon her intuition, she will spend decades trying to uncover this family secret.

For readers of The Vanishing Half and Woman of Light, this showstopping debut by a vibrant new voice in fiction is a riveting novel about the search for truth, the shadow of trauma, and the persistence of love across time.

About the author:

Amanda Peters is a writer of Mi'kmaq and settler ancestry. Her work has appeared in the The Antigonish Review, Grain, Alaska Quarterly Review, and filling Station. She is the winner of the 2021 Indigenous Voices Award for Unpublished Prose and a participant in the 2021 Writer's Trust Rising Stars program. A graduate of the master of the fine arts program at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico, Amanda Peters has a certificate in creative writing from the University of Totonto. She lives in te Annapolis Valley, Nova Scotia, with her fur babies, Holly and Pook.