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"An extraordinary new novel that extends and amplifies
her obsessions with isolation, identity, and the keen desperation that lurks
just beneath most human interaction . . . This defiant, frighteningly beautiful
novel is as disturbing as its setting. Built to last, Shelter feels
like Phillips' bid for immortality."
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In a West Virginia girls' camp in July 1963, a group of children experience
an unexpected rite of passage. Shelter is an astonishing portrayal of an American
loss of innocence as witnessed by a drifter named Parson, two young sisters,
Lenny and Alma, and a feral boy. Like Buddy, the wide-eyed boy so at home
in the natural bower of the forest, Lenny and Alma are forever transformed
by violence, by family secrets, by surprising turns of love.
What they choose to remember, what they meet within and around the boundaries
of the camp, will determine the rest of their lives. In a leafy wilderness
undiminished by societal rules and dilemmas, Lenny and Alma confront a terrible
darkness and find in themselves a knowledge never lent to them by the adult
world.
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