Untying the Moon

A Novel

Fiction & Literature, Contemporary Women
Cover of the book Untying the Moon by Ellen Malphrus, University of South Carolina Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Ellen Malphrus ISBN: 9781611176117
Publisher: University of South Carolina Press Publication: October 20, 2015
Imprint: University of South Carolina Press Language: English
Author: Ellen Malphrus
ISBN: 9781611176117
Publisher: University of South Carolina Press
Publication: October 20, 2015
Imprint: University of South Carolina Press
Language: English

Bailey Martin is in perpetual motion—a child of the South Carolina lowcountry tides, being pulled to and from a reckoning with destiny. A marine biologist by training and an artist by dedication and talent, Bailey is a woman of contradictions, at once a free-spirited adventurer giving deeply of herself to environmental causes and familial loyalties but also consumed by primal, isolating appetites and dangerous attractions. Restless and troubled, Bailey chafes at her existence, becoming uneasy in her success, her life, and her own skin. Untying the Moon, the debut novel from southern storyteller Ellen Malphrus, is a vibrant tale of self-discovery, approaching the realms of myth and lore as readers ride shotgun with Bailey in Blue Ruby, her ’67 Skylark convertible, from Manhattan down the eastern seaboard, from coastal Carolina to the Alaskan wilderness and back again, all in search of the embrace of love and—finally—of home. When Bailey trades the freedom of the road for a relationship with Padgett Turner, a Vietnam veteran haunted by his past, she finds the compelling possibility of settling into one place and one relationship. But the weight of Padgett’s emotional scars is too much for either to bear, even together. As Padgett’s darkness escalates, a moment of horrific violence pulls Bailey homeward to the Jericho River of Kirk’s Bluff, South Carolina—a river of dolphins, dreams, and portents. In her lifelong friendship with neighbor Ben Simmons and under the sheltering gaze of her fisherman father, Cecil, and Ben’s parents, George and Retta, Bailey uncovers the healing connections she had been seeking elsewhere and earns her chance at the truest prize of all—a balance between her dedication to her inner life and responsibilities to the outer world. Recalling the writings of James Dickey, Jack Kerouac, Jack London, Pat Conroy, Mary Alice Monroe, and Lee Smith, Untying the Moon explores the redemptive powers of home, nature, creation, and storytelling itself. With prose that ebbs and flows from the lyrical and lush to the staccato and sparse, Malphrus’s novel is rich with classical allusions and regional folklore, the enrapturing beauty of its settings, a racially and geographically diverse charismatic cast, and all the mystery and magic of fate. New York Times best-selling writer and Story River Books editor at large Pat Conroy provides a foreword to the novel.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Bailey Martin is in perpetual motion—a child of the South Carolina lowcountry tides, being pulled to and from a reckoning with destiny. A marine biologist by training and an artist by dedication and talent, Bailey is a woman of contradictions, at once a free-spirited adventurer giving deeply of herself to environmental causes and familial loyalties but also consumed by primal, isolating appetites and dangerous attractions. Restless and troubled, Bailey chafes at her existence, becoming uneasy in her success, her life, and her own skin. Untying the Moon, the debut novel from southern storyteller Ellen Malphrus, is a vibrant tale of self-discovery, approaching the realms of myth and lore as readers ride shotgun with Bailey in Blue Ruby, her ’67 Skylark convertible, from Manhattan down the eastern seaboard, from coastal Carolina to the Alaskan wilderness and back again, all in search of the embrace of love and—finally—of home. When Bailey trades the freedom of the road for a relationship with Padgett Turner, a Vietnam veteran haunted by his past, she finds the compelling possibility of settling into one place and one relationship. But the weight of Padgett’s emotional scars is too much for either to bear, even together. As Padgett’s darkness escalates, a moment of horrific violence pulls Bailey homeward to the Jericho River of Kirk’s Bluff, South Carolina—a river of dolphins, dreams, and portents. In her lifelong friendship with neighbor Ben Simmons and under the sheltering gaze of her fisherman father, Cecil, and Ben’s parents, George and Retta, Bailey uncovers the healing connections she had been seeking elsewhere and earns her chance at the truest prize of all—a balance between her dedication to her inner life and responsibilities to the outer world. Recalling the writings of James Dickey, Jack Kerouac, Jack London, Pat Conroy, Mary Alice Monroe, and Lee Smith, Untying the Moon explores the redemptive powers of home, nature, creation, and storytelling itself. With prose that ebbs and flows from the lyrical and lush to the staccato and sparse, Malphrus’s novel is rich with classical allusions and regional folklore, the enrapturing beauty of its settings, a racially and geographically diverse charismatic cast, and all the mystery and magic of fate. New York Times best-selling writer and Story River Books editor at large Pat Conroy provides a foreword to the novel.

More books from University of South Carolina Press

Cover of the book Understanding Colum McCann by Ellen Malphrus
Cover of the book Burke in the Archives by Ellen Malphrus
Cover of the book The South Carolina Encyclopedia Guide to the Governors of South Carolina by Ellen Malphrus
Cover of the book Understanding Norman Mailer by Ellen Malphrus
Cover of the book State of the Heart by Ellen Malphrus
Cover of the book Writing South Carolina by Ellen Malphrus
Cover of the book The Lost Woods by Ellen Malphrus
Cover of the book The Batik Art of Mary Edna Fraser by Ellen Malphrus
Cover of the book New Deal, New Landscape by Ellen Malphrus
Cover of the book Yes, Lord, I Know the Road by Ellen Malphrus
Cover of the book A Delicate Balance by Ellen Malphrus
Cover of the book Jeremiah and God's Plans of Well-being by Ellen Malphrus
Cover of the book Understanding Larry McMurtry by Ellen Malphrus
Cover of the book Hold Like Owls by Ellen Malphrus
Cover of the book Reflections of South Carolina by Ellen Malphrus
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy