An award-winning and haunting meditation on aging and
self-determination.
A CBC Canada Reads 2015 Selection! Finalist for the 2013 Governor
General's Literary Award for French-to-English Translation Deep in a
Northern Ontario forest live Tom and Charlie, two octogenarians
determined to live out the rest of their lives on their own terms: free
of all ties and responsibilities, their only connection to civilization
two pot farmers who bring them whatever they can't eke out for
themselves. But their solitude is disrupted by the arrival of two women.
The first is a photographer searching for survivors of a series of
catastrophic fires nearly a century earlier; the second is an elderly
escapee from a psychiatric institution. The little hideaway in the woods
will never be the same. Originally published in French, And the Birds
Rained Down, the recipient of several prestigious prizes, including the
Prix de Cinq Continents de la Francophonie, is a haunting meditation on
aging and self-determination.
'Nostalgic and beautifully grotesque, this novel is delightfully baroque
and, although short, so striking it will simply never leave you.' --The
Coast