Cobweb Walking
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- $13.99
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
As a child-so tiny and delicate that her father calls her fairy-Morgan has a special relationship with nature, for she can hear the Silence, the harmonising force that creates and sustains all things. The humming of the Silence is her secret, even from her beloved father, as is the day that she walks along a cobweb.
But with adolescence comes a loss of childhood innocence and the intrusion into her perfect world of an unwanted stepmother and baby sister. These loud and chaotic presences, together with an act, as she perceives it, of unwarranted violence by her father, have a traumatic effect on Morgan. Sent by her father to get help-for the family has been trapped in a fall-out shelter for days-Morgan, a dwarf, goes instead on an odyssey into the unknown, seemingly hostile, world outside her home.
Mourning the disappearance of magic from her life and realising for the first time that she is physically deformed, Morgan learns that only through love can she regain her empathy with the Silence and the ability to transcend the boundaries that enclose other people.
In this, her first novel published in 1986, Sara Banerji has created a work of startling originality and beauty. Full of vivid images, Cobweb Walking is a perceptive story about shattered childhood dreams and the painful awakening to self-awareness.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
So delicate and magically sentient a creature is the tiny adolescent girl Morgan, the central character of this first novel that has much in common with fairy tales, that she can walk on cobwebs and smell, hear, see and feel what no one else can. Indeed, she can hear the Fairy Queen speaking to her and she can hear Silence. The perfection of her life is shattered when her adored father remarries and produces a sibling-rival, a bitterly resented half-sister. Her purity tarnished by vile sentimentsresentment, jealousyMorgan considers abandoning the three of them to their fate in a fall-out shelter when The Bomb falls; but in the end she rediscovers her special relation to the natural world and with it her newfound, overriding love for her family. Again she and the "whole world'' have become one, but she alone in creation can walk on moonbeams. The final scene is wonderfully ablaze with mystic fire, as the sisters dance wildly in the moonlight. On the way to that moment, however, the fable often treads a cobweb-fine line this side of bathosstet, tottering dangerously at times.