Our Father's House

by Annette B. Peck


Formats

Softcover
£11.25
Softcover
£11.25

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 31/03/2001

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 292
ISBN : 9781587216268

About the Book

The scene is set in the city of Amsterdam, the Netherlands in the 1970s. We meet a very shy youth worker called Tom. He is gifted in his dealings with pre-adolescent children. Tom is also a very religious man and an artist. Iris is a mother seeking a solution for her eleven-year-old son who seems to be lost since his father died. In her quest for a solution she goes back to the place where she volunteered as a teenager. Tom has continued to work there and it becomes soon clear that he still has very deep feelings for her.

We see how a triangle develops between Tom, Iris and her son Pierre. There is a soft and dreamy quality about this love story in which religious symbols are sensitively interwoven. Soon though some difficult realities come to haunt this newly blended family. The handling of both legal and medical ethics plays a very important role. The strong faith in this family helps the three of them to move on.

Love and good parenting form the upper currents in the story. Underneath it we realize that it is all about fatherhood. This book will particularly appeal to women in their childbearing years.


About the Author

Annette grew up in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. It is in that country that she had her professional career as a social worker. Her involvement with clients gave her a chance to reach out to many people in distress. Since then she has been living for the last 30 years in the United States. As a 68-year-old she felt that the distance in time and place from her earlier career had given her a special opportunity to see the human dilemma within a broader perspective.

Our Father's House is her first effort in writing fiction. The creative process inside her mind wanted to emerge with great urgency. Once she decided to accept it, the floodgates really opened. She feels privileged that her soul was able to fuel her pen so that this story could come out unaltered by reason or convention. She recommends the process to anyone who likes to try.