The Centaurs Wife, Amanda Leduc
The Centaurs Wife, Amanda Leduc
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The Centaur's Wife

Author: Amanda Leduc

Narrator: Victoria Carr

Unabridged: 11 hr 55 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 02/16/2021


Synopsis

Amanda Leduc's brilliant new novel, woven with fairy tales of her own devising and replete with both catastrophe and magic, is a vision of what happens when we ignore the natural world and the darker parts of our own natures.

Heather is sleeping peacefully after the birth of her twin daughters when the sound of the world ending jolts her awake. Stumbling outside with her babies and her new husband, Brendan, she finds that their city has been destroyed by falling meteors and that her little family are among only a few who survived.

But the mountain that looms over the city is still green--somehow it has been spared the destruction that has brought humanity to the brink of extinction. Heather is one of the few who know the mountain, a place city-dwellers have always been forbidden to go. Her dad took her up the mountain when she was a child on a misguided quest to heal her legs, damaged at birth. The tragedy that resulted has shaped her life, bringing her both great sorrow and an undying connection to the deep magic of the mountain, made real by the beings she and her dad encountered that day: Estajfan, a centaur born of sorrow and of an ancient, impossible love, and his two siblings, marooned between the magical and the human world. Even as those in the city around her--led by Tasha, a charismatic doctor who fled to the city from the coast with her wife and other refugees--struggle to keep everyone alive, Heather constantly looks to the mountain, drawn by love, by fear, by the desire for rescue. She is torn in two by her awareness of what unleashed the meteor shower and what is coming for the few survivors, once the green and living earth makes a final reckoning of the usefulness of human life and finds it wanting.

At times devastating, but ultimately redemptive, Amanda Leduc's fable for our uncertain times reminds us that the most important things in life aren't things at all, but rather the people we want by our side at the end of the world.

About The Author

AMANDA LEDUC's essays and stories have appeared in publications across Canada, the US and the UK. She is the author of the non-fiction book Disfigured: On Fairy Tales, Disability, and Making Space (Coach House Books, 2020), which was shortlisted for the 2020 Governor General’s Award in Nonfiction, and the novel The Miracles of Ordinary Men (2013, ECW Press). Her latest novel is The Centaur’s Wife, out now with Random House Canada. She has cerebral palsy and lives in Hamilton, Ontario, where she works as the Communications Coordinator for the Festival of Literary Diversity (FOLD), Canada's first festival for diverse authors and stories.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Mel (Epic Reading) on February 02, 2022

While beautifully written, I felt lost at times throughout this narrative. For the first 150+ pages I had a very hard time feeling like the centaur story and the human one were in any way related. Even though there are connections it just felt a bit forced. It comes together in the end but this weig......more

Goodreads review by Rebeccah on April 19, 2021

This was very creative. And the cover art is very nice. That is the kindest praise I can honestly give it. I've certainly never read this story before. But it's also a jumbled mess that didn't work on any level, at least for me. As a survival story it fell short in the details. We never know where it......more

Goodreads review by Emily on December 13, 2020

Leduc masterfully captures the darkness and hope of fairytales in this story of survival and community, weaving together magic, sorrow, and the wonder of nature. The story captures attention right from the beginning with a tale of impossible love that is everything you'd expect of a fairy tale. It th......more

Goodreads review by Maria on January 11, 2023

Wow! The perfect magical realism book I didn’t know I needed until now. I really enjoyed this book right from the start, with its mystery elements and dystopian setting. It was great how everything tied together in the end with how characters were connected, and the main message of climate change is......more

Goodreads review by Andrea on February 19, 2021

This novel starts out tentatively based in realism, and then steadily grows into magic and fairy tale, until by the end it is almost purely myth. I read Leduc's Disfigured: On Fairy Tales, Disability, and Making Space when it came out a few years ago--I bought a copy for Echo at the release party, an......more


Quotes

“Stunning. . . . Stories are rarely as powerful or as skilfully crafted as The Centaur’s Wife. The novel is as grand a book as you are likely to read this year, a story of impossibilities delivered with a calm, steady confidence. The reader knows from the opening lines they are in the hands of a master storyteller; Leduc never lets them down.” —Quill & Quire (starred review)

“Amanda Leduc has created an exquisite magical world, perfectly rendered, for her dark and wonderful story about the dream life of outsiders and the disabled. And through it, she has scattered her own collection of fairy tales that rival Grimm and Anderson in their provocative beauty.” —Heather O’Neill, author of The Lonely Hearts Hotel and Lullabies for Little Criminals

 “Mythological mayhem and the chaos of our times converge in this delicately told tale. Imaginative at every turn, author Amanda Leduc explores the supernatural and superhuman paths we take toward the mirage of family, identity and belonging.” —Catherine Hernandez, award-winning author of Scarborough and Crosshairs

“[The Centaur’s Wife] looks at the fairy tale tradition, rips it apart and audaciously reassembles it. . . . [T]hough it enters the realm of the mysterious and inexplicable, it is anchored to a persuasive naturalism in chronicling the drama of a small group of people fighting for survival in the wake of planetary disaster. . . . [R]eaders will be hooked immediately.” Calgary Herald