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Book
Title: Remembering the Bones
Author:
Frances Itani
Publishing
Company: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd.
Year: 2007
#
of Pages: 283
ISBN
#: 13:
978-0-00-200540-1
ISBN
#: 10: 0-00-200540-9
$29.95
5 Stars
Reviewer: Deborah Ground Buckner
Frances
Itani's Remembering the Bones is a
celebration of life. Georgina "Georgie" Danforth
Witley is 80 years old, on her way to fly to London to a birthday luncheon
with Queen Elizabeth II. In honor of Her
Majesty's 80th birthday, 99 subjects have been chosen to share in
this honor. Fiercely independent,
Georgie insists on driving herself to the airport. Just seconds from home, her car slips through
guardrails and plunges down into a ravine.
There,
fighting for survival, Georgie reviews her life, set up within the context of
her grandfather's copy of Grey's Anatomy
that she had loved to look at as a child.
The bones that connect the human body also connect the human life. Through her recollections, the reader comes
to know Georgie's grandparents, her parents and sister, her husband and
children. Hers is a family of strong
women, and each is celebrated as Georgie's memories reveal their life stories.
At
one point, Georgie finds herself wondering what her life is worth as she
struggles to reach her car, hoping to honk the horn and summon rescuers. After reading her story, one can see that a
simple life of an ordinary person can be rich indeed.
Itani
artfully weaves the story back and forth from Georgie's perilous status in the
ravine to the times she relates through memory.
There is never any confusion about where the story is or how Georgie
goes from one point to another. Vivid
description brings each character and each setting clearly to life.
Frances
Itani is the author if Deafening,
which won the Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best Book (Canada and Caribbean region) and the Drummer
General's Award for Fiction. It was a
finalist for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award and for Canada Reads
2006 (English and French). Her most
recent work, Poached Egg on Toast,
won the Ottawa Book Award for Fiction and the Canadian Authors' Association
Jubilee Award for Short Stories. She has
won three CBC Literary Awards and has also published five short story
collections, three books of poetry and a children's book. A recent recipient of the Order of Canada, Frances Itani Lives in Ottawa.
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