Mirror Lake
-
- $9.99
-
- $9.99
Publisher Description
From internationally acclaimed crime writer Andrée A. Michaud, a brilliant and original tragicomic thriller about one man’s search for peace and sanctuary amid invasive neighbours and a mysterious death.
Retired fifty-something Robert Moreau flees a society he can no longer bear for Mirror Lake, Maine. Little does he suspect that an intrusive neighbour and a mysterious death will quickly dispel any illusions he may have had about finding sanctuary in isolation. The misanthropic Moreau quickly learns that his Thoreau-like vision is a fiction. And as in all fiction, nothing, not even Moreau’s own identity, is certain — except, perhaps, the friendship of his loyal dog, Jeff.
In this tragicomic novel of the confusion between the fabular and the real, brilliantly rooted in the forested Quebec-Maine landscape, Moreau is compelled to look deep in Mirror Lake’s shimmering waters and into the eyes of the man he is, was, and could be. Winner of the Prix Ringuet and adapted into a feature film, Mirror Lake is a masterpiece of Michaud’s canon, a playfully genre-mixing psycho-thriller that explores our mysterious existence and the bottomless self.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Michaud (The Last Summer) channels David Lynch for a surreal and creepy story involving a murder plot and shifting identities on a Maine lake. The narrator, a misanthropic 50-something Quebecois retiree named Robert Moreau, is forced to cope with the insistent friendliness of neighbor Bob Winslow after moving to Mirror Lake. The sheriff, who uncannily resembles Tim Robbins, responds to a call about a drowning but doesn't find a body. Robert moves sex worker Anita into his cabin after seeing her with a black eye; learns the sheriff, whom he's taken to calling Tim Robbins, is her boyfriend; and grows suspicious of everyone. After escaped killer Jack Picard arrives at the cabin and demands Robert find him a gun, Bob becomes convinced they are living out the plot of a novel titled The Maine Attraction. Then a body washes ashore and Robert slips and knocks his head on a rock. He wakes up nearly a year later in the hospital but appears to be someone else. While it takes a while to get going, the pervasive melancholy and lyrical precision evoke the mood of art house cinema, to which there are many references. This twisty, slow-burning novel will reward the patient reader willing to be swept along.