The damagers / Rob Benvie.
"On a summer evening in 1952, young sisters Zina and Presendia run hand-in-hand into the wooded hills of upstate New York, fleeing their family farmhouse as it collapses into flames. Deep in the Adirondack mountains, they en-counter a gritty band of "settlers" occupying a dilapidated sportsmen's complex nestled along a secluded mountain lake. The girls soon be-come inculcated in the spiritual training and rustic hedonism of the group, attracting the interest of its profane but visionary founder: a rough-necked charismatic named Peter. Selected by Peter from the ragged but devoted congregation for her erudition and steely temper, Zina is tasked with codifying his rev-olutionary teachings in a book -- a testament to rouse the masses, prophesying the rise of a new consciousness from the ashes of decadent mid-century American society. As ghosts from the sisters' violent past resurface, and the construction of a major highway ex-tension near the settlement accelerates Peter's anarchic agenda, Zina must choose between turning her back on her new life and adopted flock, or seizing the power she so desires and taking her place next to Peter in the great cata-clysm to come."-- Provided by publisher.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781039055681 (hardcover)
- Physical Description: 354 pages ; 24 cm
- Publisher: Canada, ON : Knopf Canada, 2025.
Search for related items by subject
| Subject: | Cults > Fiction. Power (Philosophy) > Fiction. Secrecy > Fiction. Sisters > Fiction. Adirondack Mountains (N.Y.) > Fiction. |
| Genre: | Historical fiction. Novels. |
Available copies
- 1 of 1 copy available at Tsuga Consortium.
Holds
- 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
| Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lakeshore Branch | FIC Benvi | 31681010423739 | FICTION | Available | - |
- Random House, Inc.
A stark, incendiary novel about two sisters seeking refuge with a reclusive cult in the Adirondacks: a parable of power and how it is claimed, wieldedâand how it transforms.
âStampeding, mesmeric.â âClaudia Dey
âAwesome in atmosphere. . . . Utterly electrifying.â âWaubgeshig Rice
On a summer evening in 1952, young sisters Zina and Presendia run hand-in-hand into the wooded hills of upstate New York, fleeing their family farmhouse as it collapses into flames.
     Deep in the Adirondack mountains, they enÂcounter a gritty band of âsettlersâ occupying a dilapidated sportsmenâs complex nestled along a secluded mountain lake. The girls soon beÂcome inculcated in the spiritual training and rustic hedonism of the group, attracting the interest of its profane but visionary founder: a rough-necked charismatic named Peter.
     Selected by Peter from the ragged but devoted congregation for her erudition and steely temper, Zina is tasked with codifying his revÂolutionary teachings in a bookâa testament to rouse the masses, prophesying the rise of a new consciousness from the ashes of decadent mid-century American society.
    As ghosts from the sistersâ violent past resurface, and the construction of a major highway exÂtension near the settlement accelerates Peterâs anarchic agenda, Zina must choose between turning her back on her new life and adopted flock, or seizing the power she so desires and taking her place next to Peter in the great cataÂclysm to come.
     A haunting, strikingly vivid depiction of an isolated world, power and its reproductions, and the forgotten, darker side of postwar American life, The Damagers is potent, unsetÂtling fiction from an exciting literary talent.