"With that, Analee moved onto the ship and only turned back once she was standing beside her fiancé, holding him tightly. The colourful paper ribbons tied between ship and shore began to break away as Analee and Jacob waved wildly at their disappearing family members. Slowly, ever so slowly, the vessel left the side of Pier #7 and was sea-born. Her engine gently pulled her out into the coldness of the Atlantic. There was definitely a crispness in the air. A brisk wind was brushing against Analee as she watched her kin become smaller and smaller. Soon they disappeared altogether, and she was left standing with a feeling of heaviness and dread. It would have been worse if she'd known then that she'd never see her mother again. "My heart is broken, Jacob."" Thus begin the adventures of Stone House. RP Mickelson's novel of Norwegian homesteaders in the Canadian prairies is a warm and well-researched tale of ancestors long passed and the country they helped build.
Autorentext
RP Mickelson has a keen interest in stories about his extended family members, especially those involving his Norwegian ancestors, who homesteaded on the Canadian prairies in the early part of the twentieth century. Before writing Stone House, he collaborated with his sister and cousins to write a comprehensive, non-fictional family history, The Mickelson Clan, published in 2016. He has also written a book on transforming people's relationship to food, Permanent Weight Release: A Healing Journey, published in 2010.