The Patron Saint of Liars (Audio Book)

Author: Ann PatchettRead By: Julia Gibson
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Product Summary
Format: Audio Book
ISBN: 9780061438325
Publisher: HarperAudio
Publish Date: 9/1/2007
Buy.com Sku: 204470107
Item#: REXUWU
Dimensions (in Inches) 5.75H x 5.5L x 1.75T
 

St. Elizabeth''s is a home for unwed mothers in the 1960s. Life there is not unpleasant, and for most, it is temporary. Not so for Rose, a beautiful, mysterious woman who comes to the home pregnant but not unwed. She plans to give up her baby because she knows she cannot be the mother it needs. But St. Elizabeth''s is near a healing spring, and when Rose''s time draws near, she cannot go through with her plans, not all of them. And she cannot remain forever untouched by what she has left behind . . . and who she has become in the leaving.
 
Annotation:
A first novel set in St. Elizabeth's, a Kentucky home for unwed mothers run by nuns. Rose Clinton turns up there, pregnant but by no means unwed, and fleeing from her life by means of a series of lies. She learns to cook from elderly Sister Evangeline, and ends up marrying Son, the handyman, who narrates the second section of the novel, describing the random series of events that led him to St. Elizabeth's. The novel's last section is told by Rose's daughter Cecilia, who finally discovers the truth about her mother's life.

 

Praise
New Orleans Times-Picayune
"A remarkable first novel...the voice is fresh and winning and the images linger....'A Patron Saint of Liars' is everything a novel should be, rich in beautiful language and tender wisdom." - Susan Larsen

New York Times Book Review
"Ann Patchett has written such a good first novel that among the many pleasures it offers is the anticipation of how wonderful her second, third, and fourth will surely be....It is a world that Ms. Patchett draws with wit and imagination....It is about pilgrimage and healing. A made-up story of an enchanted place. A fairy tale. A delight." - Alice McDermott 07/26/1992

New Yorker
"Perhaps this novel's greatest accomplishment is that we become as yearning and uncertain as the characters themselves--we search for a divine pattern to their lives, yet are surprisingly accepting of the author's reluctance to trace it for us." 28 July 1992


 
Author Bio
Ann Patchett
Patchett was named a Bunting Institute Fellow at Radcliffe College in 1993.

 
 
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Chapter One

Two o'clock in the morning, a Thursday morning, the first bit of water broke through the ground of George Clatterbuck's back pasture in Habit, Kentucky, and not a living soul saw it. Spring didn't care. Water never needed anyone's help to come up through the ground once it was ready. There are rivers, hundreds of them, running underground all the time, and because of this a man can say he is walking on water. This was a hot spring that had broken loose of its river to make mud in the grass, and it kept on till it was a clear pool and then a little creek, cutting out a snake's path toward the Panther River. Water will always seek out its own.

George Clatterbuck found it when it was already a pretty steady stream. It was only fitting that he should be the one, seeing as how it was his land. It was 1906. He was hunting for his family's dinner. He smelled the spring before he saw it, foul and sulfurous as spoiled eggs. He thought it was a bad sign, that it meant his l

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