Kate Riley is not the sort of heroine we meet in most American novels.
Stegner currently teaches fiction writing in Stanford University\'s Continuing Studies Program and lives in Point Reyes Station with her husband, writer Page Stegner, and their daughter, Allison..
The book became a Literary Ventures Selection as well as a New York Times Editors\' Choice selection.
The manuscript for Because a Fire Was in My Head won the William Faulkner-William Wisdom Award for Best Novel of 2005.
About author(s): Lynn Stegner is the author of four novels, including Undertow , Fata Morgana , and Pipers at the Gates of Dawn .
Stegner currently teaches fiction writing in Stanford University\'s Continuing Studies Program and lives in Point Reyes Station with her husband, writer Page Stegner, and their daughter, Allison.
The book became a Literary Ventures selection as well as a New York Times Editors\' Choice selection.
The manuscript for Because a Fire Was in My Head won the William Faulkner-William Wisdom Award for Best Novel of 2005.
Lynn Stegner is the author of four novels, including Undertow , Fata Morgana , and Pipers at the Gates of Dawn .
From her childhood, in which she was held captive to a mother gone mad, through her adult life, which unfolds as a mesmerizing sequence of men, abandoned children, and perpetual movement, Kate\'s story is one of desperation and remarkable invention, a strangely American tale, narrated by one of our most original writers.
Sobered by the gravity of the procedure, she commences a journey of memory that takes us back to the Saskatchewan village where she grew up and to the singular event that altered her forever and irrevocably set the course of her life.
When we first encounter her, Kate is about to undergo exploratory brain surgery for a condition she herself has fabricated.
Self-centered, shape-shifting, driven from one man to another and one city to the next, she is all too real but not at all the loyal and steady homebody of idealized womanhood.
Kate Riley is not the sort of heroine we meet in most American novels