Based on the Russian story, The Snow Maiden, Ivey’s debut
novel maintains a fairytale style. Set
in rural 1920’s Alaska, childless homesteaders, Jack and Mabel, are grieving
the loss of an unborn child and, while
Jack is crumbling under the weight of the work he must do in the harsh Alaskan
wilderness if they are to survive, Mabel is in depths of depression and
contemplating suicide. Then, one evening, in a rare moment of levity, the two
go out into the first snow and build a snowgirl only to find it destroyed the
next morning. Suddenly, a little blond-haired girl appears in the wilderness
wearing the mittens and scarf from the snowgirl.
This little girl, Faina, hunts with a red fox at her
side, treads so lightly across the snow that she doesn’t leave footprints, yet
somehow survives alone in the Alaskan wilderness. Is she real? Is she
imaginary? Jack and Mabel struggle to understand Faina, but they come to love
her as their own daughter. Neighbors worry for Mabel because nobody else has
ever seen this magical girl. But in this
beautiful, violent place things are rarely as they appear, and what they
eventually learn about Faina will transform all of them.
Enchanting from beginning to end.
Reviewed by Kim White, Head of Hoyt Library
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