A Book of Murder and Memory
Murder. Hawaiis beautiful Hanauma Bay. The suspects: two young mainlanders on their honeymoon. Maryann Acker, a pretty young Mormon woman, is 18. William, just out of prison, is 28. The crime is robbery, ending in a killing. And before the spree is over, another robbery and murder a few days later in California.
In 1982, Linda Spalding, a mainlander herself, living in Hawaii, is chosen as a juror for Maryanns trial there. Surprisingly the chief witness against Maryann is William, accusing her of shooting their victim. Spalding has reasonable doubts, but on the last day of the trial, she is abruptly dismissed from the jury and Maryann is sentenced to life in prison.
Eighteen years later, Spalding stumbles over the journal she kept during the trial and reads it carefully. Was she right to have doubts? Then she tracks down Maryann, who is still incarcerated.
Linda writes, Maryann answers, and moved by the letter, Linda begins to uncover much more than the answer to the question of Maryanns guilt or innocence. Theres the bold new friendship frustrated by monitored visits, hard-to-make phone calls and the dehumanizing results of years in prison. But as her understanding of the forces that drove Maryanns actions grows, Linda finds herself compelled to examine her own past as well as Maryanns.
"Starred Review. This delicate yet powerful work should find a wide readership." - PW.
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Linda Spalding was born in Kansas and lived in Mexico and Hawaii before immigrating to Canada in 1982. She is the author of four critically acclaimed novels, The Purchase (awarded Canada's Governor General's Literary Award), Daughters of Captain Cook, The Paper Wife, and (with her daughter Esta) Mere. Her nonfiction includes A Dark Place in the Jungle, Riska: Memories of a Dayak Girlhood, and Who Named the Knife. In 2003 Spalding received the Harbourfront Festival Prize for her contribution to the Canadian literary community. She lives in Toronto, where she is an editor at Brick magazine.
The secret of freedom lies in educating people, whereas the secret of tyranny is in keeping them ignorant
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