KODIAK

by Michael Philip Greeley


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Hardcover
$18.95
$13.50
Hardcover
$13.50

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 7/1/2002

Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 108
ISBN : 9780759670389

About the Book

The story centers on three people: Jesse and Kate Drake and their sixteen-year-old son, Daniel. It begins in July, in Downeast Maine, on Kate's family farm and ends there just after New Year's.

Kate is a painter/sculptor and Jesse a writer; Daniel is an unsophisticated sixteen year-old who is resentful and suspicious of their recent move to Crow's Neck from Boston. Kate's brother Jake and his wife Betsy live in the nearby town of Lubec.

One evening, late, Daniel rides his bicycle home from town and as he rides past Betsy and Jake's place all of the lights in the house go out except for a light in the bedroom. Daniel watches, transfixed, through an open strip at the bottom of the blind as Betsy stops and shrugs off her robe. This leads to a relationship which ends when Jake, at a dinner party, proudly announces that at long last Betsy is pregnant.

Jesse finds it increasingly difficult to write. His fear of failing, along with an increasing sense of his own mortality, pulls him outside, into nature, back toward his childhood dreams of the north country and the woods. One morning he takes a boat out on the harbor. A maverick gale blows up pitching him into the frigid water. This near-tragedy accelerates his longing for peace and surcease.

Kate paints in a converted parlor on the first floor. Her energy and enthusiasm for her work generate tensions between her and Jesse. These tensions grow when, unexpectedly, a letter arrives informing Kate that two of her canvases have been sold to an important gallery in New York.

The story ends here exactly at the point where the lives of Jesse, Kate and Daniel have come unraveled. There is a short epilogue in which Daniel, now older and married, returns to Crow's Neck for a visit.

An unidentified narrator tells the story in the present tense. Jesse, Daniel and Kate's thinking form an important part of the narrative and there are short chapters in which their thoughts are the only form of discourse.


About the Author

Michael Philip Greeley is a mathematician (at the University of Massachusetts Boston) who has an interest in the imagination and its relationship to the creative act. His novel, Kodiak, explores

this relationship through the consciousness of three members of the same family.