Women Talking
CBC Books | | Posted: June 28, 2018 3:20 PM | Last Updated: June 25, 2019
Miriam Toews
The sun rises on a quiet June morning in 2009. August Epp sits alone in the hayloft of a barn, anxiously bent over his notebook. He writes quickly, aware that his solitude will soon be broken. Eight women — ordinary grandmothers, mothers and teenagers; yet to August, each one extraordinary — will climb the ladder into the loft, and the day's true task will begin. This task will be both simple and subversive: August, like the women, is a traditional Mennonite, and he has been asked to record a secret conversation.
Thus begins Miriam Toews's spellbinding novel. Gradually, as we hear the women's vivid voices console, tease, admonish, regale and debate each other, we piece together the reason for the gathering: they have 48 hours to make a life-altering choice on behalf of all the women and children in the colony. And like a vast night sky coming into view behind the bright sparks of their voices, we learn of the devastating events that have led to this moment. (From Knopf Canada)
Women Talking was a finalist for the 2018 Governor General's Literary Award for fiction and was a finalist for the 2019 Trillium Book Award.
- The best Canadian fiction of 2018
- Miriam Toews on the war she didn't know she was winning
- Miriam Toews: 5 books that changed my life
- 100 writers in Canada you need to know now
- The top 10 bestselling Canadian books of 2018
- 15 Canadian books to read on International Women's Day
From the book
The meetings have been organized hastily by Agata Friesen and Greta Loewen in response to the strange attacks that have haunted the women of Molotschna for the past several years. Since 2005, nearly every girl and woman has been raped by what many in the colony believed to be ghosts, or Satan, supposedly as punishment for their sins. The attacks occurred at night. As their families slept, the girls and women were made unconscious with a spray of the anesthetic used on our farm animals, made from the belladonna plant. The next morning, they would wake up in pain, groggy and often bleeding, and not understand why. Recently, the eight demons responsible for the attacks turned out to be real men from Molotschna, many of whom are the close relatives — brothers, cousins, uncles, nephews — of the women.
From Women Talking by Miriam Toews ©2018. Published by Knopf Canada.