Crossings was Betty Lambert's only novel; published by Pulp Press in
1979, it was revolutionary for its frank and unsettling portrayal of
Vicky, a female writer in Vancouver in the early 1960s, an educated and
intelligent woman who struggles to come to terms with herself as she
navigates an emotionally abusive relationship with Mik, a violent logger
and ex-con. Their physical, often violent affair offers an honest and
unflinching look at relationships and female suffering. The book caused
a furor when it was first published, and in fact was banned from some
feminist Canadian bookstores. At the same time, it was widely acclaimed
by critics and writers, including Jane Rule, who wrote: This portrait of
an artist as a young woman should stand beside Alice Munro's Who Do You
Think You Are and Margaret Laurence's The Diviners as a testimony of
the courage and cost of being a woman and a writer.
Out of print for more than twenty years, this new edition of Crossings
will introduce this Canadian classic―and remarkable writer―to a new
generation of readers.
Includes an introduction by novelist Claudia Casper (The
Reconstruction and The Continuation of Love by Other Means).