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Formats
Paperback Book Details
  • 06/2018
  • 9781775210221
  • 884 pages
  • $24.99
Open Ebook Ebook Details
  • 06/2018
  • 9781775210214
  • 884 pages
  • $12.99
By the Next Pause
In By The Next Pause, Canadian author G. Barton-Sinkia brings us to a time when Toronto was on the cusp of turning into the diverse mosaic it is today. At seventeen, Pam Allen escapes Jamaica, leaving her infant daughter Simone behind. Years later, after the death of her aunt, Pam is forced to take in the daughter she never wanted. They live in a run-down apartment complex in North York next to Mike O’Shea – a racist, loudmouth high school dropout who has recently separated from his wife and finds himself raising his eight-year-old son, Nolan, alone. The two parents try to coexist in a world where they are drowning as single parents until they reluctantly join forces to raise their young children together. When a life-altering mistake forces their children on diverging, tumultuous paths, the make-shift family struggles to find their way back to each other before their whole world crumbles for good.
Reviews
Barton-Sinkia’s saga of interconnected lives in Canada will keep a relentless hold on readers’ attention. In the 1980s, eight-year-old Simone Allen moves from Jamaica to Toronto, where she will live with the mother she barely knew. Pam Allen had left Simone with a Jamaican aunt to work in Toronto, but after the aunt’s death, the mother and child are forced together. While Pam struggles with excruciating memories of Jamaica and harsh bouts of depression, Simone fights her mother’s ire while finding her footing in the new culture. Her neighbor and schoolmate Nolan O’Shea doesn’t mind that his new friend is black, and she doesn’t care that he’s white Irish Catholic, and they are drawn closer together when their single parents use the same after-school sitter in their apartment complex. Over the story’s decades-long scope, Simone finds first love with a woman, while Nolan enters a toxic phase of “discovering himself and his culture” by joining a small but violent hate group. Part of the novel’s appeal comes from seeing the characters grow, such as how Simone’s hard work finally results in landing her dream job, while Nolan overcomes his checkered past and becomes the star of a popular reality series. This candid story depicts a bond that stays strong through childhood and into adulthood, even as Simone and Nolan are geographically distant. Barton-Sinkia’s moving family epic will captivate readers. (BookLife)
Formats
Paperback Book Details
  • 06/2018
  • 9781775210221
  • 884 pages
  • $24.99
Open Ebook Ebook Details
  • 06/2018
  • 9781775210214
  • 884 pages
  • $12.99
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