Rain Line
Anne Whitney Pierce

Hardscrabble Books–Fiction of New England
University Press of New England
2000 • 377 pp. 5 1/2 x 8 1/2"
Fiction / Boston / New England

$15.95 Paper, 1-58465-214-4
$30.00 Cloth, 1-58465-021-4


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"This simple tale is redeemed from sentimentality by Pierce's sure, resonant prose. Leo is an appealing character and her parents, especially her mother, Lydia, who spouts statistics and non sequiturs, are affectionately and precisely delineated. In Pierce's patient hands (her Galaxy Girls, Wonder Women won the 1994 Willa Cather Fiction Prize), this story of survival and healing achieves poetic immediacy." —Publishers Weekly

A beautifully written novel of grief, recovery, and love.

"To this day, I wonder if Danny knew he was going to die."

Following a drunken celebration of a college hockey victory, a car goes off a bridge and plunges into a river. The passenger, a young woman, escapes; the driver, her boyfriend, drowns. In a clear, compelling voice, Leo Baye, the narrator of Anne Whitney Pierce's powerful first novel, traces the aftermath of a tragedy -- struggling with her guilt over her own survival and slowly coming to terms with the less-than-perfect nature of the relationship she has lost.

Though a star of the Harvard hockey team, Danny McPhee had remained at heart a Cambridge "townie" whose Irish-American family ran a fish market. That sense of alienation was perhaps his strongest connection with Leo, another Cambridge native whose dysfunctional family has crossed a line from "shabby genteel" to outright eccentric. Having fled when she was seventeen, Leo is now driven back to the crumbling home of her childhood by confusion and depression, but once there, she must fight to keep from being absorbed again by the familiar routines of her family's precarious existence.

Danny's memory continues to exert a powerful influence on Leo, even as she begins to resume her normal life as a student at the Beacon Conservatory, working on her thesis and practicing the music that will be her audition piece. She forces herself to go through the motions of daily life, taking the bus and playing her violin, and she begins to reconsider her relationship with Danny, a frustrated young man who was constantly on the verge of violence. Her efforts to reconstruct her life, however, are dealt a severe setback when she learns that she is pregnant with Danny's child.

Anne Whitney Pierce offers a moving, insightful tale of a young woman's efforts to extract meaning from tragedy and rebuild her life on her own terms. Rain Line is a profound, ultimately optimistic novel of grief and recovery.

Paterson Fiction Prize, the Poetry Center, Passaic County Community College. 2001


ANNE WHITNEY PIERCE is the author of a book of short stories, Galaxy Girls: Wonder Women (1994), winner of the Willa Cather Fiction Prize. She lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.








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