Meet My New Publicist!

Meet My New Publicist!

I’m SO excited to announce that last weekend I signed a publicity agreement with Creative Edge.

For years, I’ve been doing everything myself: writing, formatting, publishing, and marketing. As the number of books grow, the work increases exponentially. I now have four books published in the Hollystone Mysteries series, book one of a new romance series in revision, and a brand new Lighthouse mystery half finished.

I feel like Mickey Mikkelson is the missing piece I’ve been needing. Just knowing he’s out there working for me gives me a renewed sense of energy. Magic is afoot on this St. Patrick’s Day. I feel blessed and excited because I have no idea what’s coming next.

But if you keep an eye on social media, you’ll find out!

Launching Spring Equinox in Port Moody

I’m a long time Port Moody resident who’s recently moved out to the Fraser Valley, but I’m coming back to launch my latest book, To Kill a King.

The easiest way to get to the launch is to park at the Port Moody Rec Centre. Walk past the rinks and down toward the sports field at the back. Before you get to the sports field, there’s a small bridge and a path. Walk down there and you will soon come to the Noon’s Creek Salmon Hatchery. Of course, if you’re in the mood for a beautiful walk you can come the other direction from the Inlet Trail.

This is an outside, socially distanced event, but please wear your mask and be safe.

I hope to see you there!

Ridgerunner by Gil Adamson

Ridgerunner by Gil Adamson

In 2007, poet-author Gil Adamson (Gillian) published her award-winning debut novel, The Outlander. Thirteen years later, we are reading the sequel. It’s almost in real time.

The Outlander tells the story of nineteen-year-old Mary Boulton who kills her husband and flees into the Canadian Rockies pursued by her two brothers-in-law. There she meets several eccentric characters in an Alberta mining town, one of whom she falls in love with—William Moreland, the Ridgerunner. Adamson wondered what would happen if this couple had a child. They did, and thirteen years later we’re reading about the boy’s internal struggles in this touching coming-of-age story.

Jack Boulton is a twelve-year-old boy. His mother, Mary, died the previous fall. Jack got sick, and his father left him with a local nun so he could go back to his previous life of crime. Blowing up mines and robbing banks is ridgerunner senior’s forte. But William’s motives are heartfelt. He’s trying to make a slew of money so he and his boy can live somewhere peacefully. Plus, he’s trying to cope with his wife’s unexpected death. The only (well, maybe not the only) problem is, the nun, one Emelia Cload has decided that the boy is hers.

Jack is not enamored with this decision, and early in the story, he escapes his regimented captivity and heads home. The nun (which is what she is called most often) wants him back and puts up a wanted poster with a $2000 reward for his return. If that seems like odd behaviour for a nun, brace yourself. That’s only the beginning. The nun is an unexpected antagonist.

The boy learns to shoot, live alone, take a beating, fend for himself and, in short order, becomes a man. In fact, Jack becomes the Ridgerunner himself. The parallels between father and son are a theme of this story. They are both outlaws, on the run, and trying to survive in hostile terrain.

This is a rollicking literary adventure told in three parts. The horses, guns, and wild animals give it a western feel. At one point, Moreland spends three days treed by an old grizzly. It’s character-driven but there’s plenty of action, tension, suspense, and dropped bombs (which I won’t reveal.) It also has an historical Can Lit feel as it’s set in and around Banff and Lake Louise, formerly the town of Laggan. Since it’s 1917 when the story begins, there are references to The Great War—the working men of a prison camp feature in the plot.

Adamson’s lyrical prose and poetic descriptions immerse us in this rugged Western Canadian landscape. She is mad with details and rich with language. “Hair in horripilating waves.” Now, there’s a word. There are bits of Nakoda, a strange language spoken by Sampson Beaver the second, and interjections of folksy wisdom. “If you’re afraid of doing something son, you’re more or less obligated to do it.” Adamson comments that allusions to Huckleberry Finn, Treasure Island, and True Grit, among others pepper the book and are among her influences, along with “Western and noir movies, songs, and fairy tales.” I heard shades of Lonesome Dove and The Tenderness of Wolves myself. The haunting landscape of the wild places, of pioneers, of bygone days lends itself to lyrical prose.


Gil Adamson *image from theglobeandmail.com

As reviewed in the Ottawa Review of Books, March 2021