The Bone Mother
The Bone Mother book cover

The Bone Mother

Kindle Edition

Price
$7.99
Publisher
Proving Ground Press
Publication Date

Description

'David Demchuk...A master of bowel-loosening terror' The Globe and Mail 'Moving, horrifying, terrifying' Ellen Datlow, editor, The Best Horror of the Year Volume 10 'Wise and claustrophobically beautiful' Hugo Award-winning author Samuel R. Delany 'Brilliant and totally original' Christopher Golden, author of Ararat and The Pandora Room 'This extraordinary debut novel crosses borders and boundaries' Publishers Weekly (starred review) --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Book Description 2018 Amazon Canada First Novel Award finalist On the 2017 Scotiabank Giller Prize Long-List --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. David Demchuk is a Canadian playwright and novelist, who received a longlisted Scotiabank Giller Prize nomination in 2017 for his debut novel The Bone Mother. Originally from Winnipeg, Manitoba, he moved to Toronto, Ontario in 1984. --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Dragoi from The Bone Mother by David Demchuk When I was thirteen, shortly after the end of the war, my mother and sister and I moved from the eastern village all the way to Krakow, where my Aunt Polina lived. Both my father and Polina’s husband had been killed in recent battles, and Polina had found a house where we, the widows and children, could live together. While she and my mother had never been close, they were lonely and afraid now and faced an uncertain future. Polina, in particular, feared retaliation for her German husband’s Nazi ties, had apparently removed her rings, destroyed her wedding certificate and had returned to her maiden name. My mother hoped that a new home would be a new start, and that we could support each other in whatever challenges we faced. And yet: even though her driver met us at the train station and brought us to her home, Polina rushed to the door in a panic as if she’d forgotten we were coming. She pushed the key to the new house into my mother’s hand, stammered something about unexpected guests, and then had the driver take us away without her. We drove off in uneasy silence, weaving through the streets until we pulled up in front of an unassuming house on Ulica Szeroka. As the driver brought our cases up the steps, he assured us that Polina was preparing to join us, and would do so at her earliest opportunity. She never did. Later that night, perhaps when the driver turned the key in the lock, or when my sisters and I pulled the dust cloths from the worn but elegant antique furniture, or when my mother tucked us into our freshly changed beds, Aunt Polina fell down her cellar stairs shrieking and tearing at herself, had a heart attack, and died. A few days after the funeral, my mother was upstairs bathing my sister and I was sitting alone in the kitchen, when I heard a strange sound coming from the basement. As if an animal had somehow gotten trapped and was whining to be freed. In our previous house, a fox came into the cellar through a loose window and smashed some jars of my mother’s beets and sauerkraut. I called out for her but she couldn’t hear me. I decided to be brave and go downstairs to see if it was a fox, and perhaps I could release it. I knew it might be rabid, so I put my gloves on just in case. The staircase down was narrow, with pantry shelves along one side, stocked with canned goods. Nothing behind them. The animal sound was coming from farther down, somewhere behind the stairs. I reached the floor, put my hand out towards the centre of the room, feeling for the beaded chain of the ceiling light. I found it, pulled it, splashed the room with harsh white light. In the corner behind the stairs was a new-looking coal furnace. Could something have come down the chimney? As I moved closer, my gloved hands ready for the capture, I realized the sound was of someone sobbing. Someone beside or behind the furnace. Someone I couldn’t see. I drew closer still, looked one way and then another. No one was there, I was alone, but still I could hear it―coming, it seemed, from within the wall. The rest of the basement was lined with stone, but this corner was built over with brick. I leaned in towards those on the staircase wall, as this was where the sound was the loudest―and suddenly one brick fell out, was pushed out, and then another, and I could see in, and what I saw was a hand. A large, thick-fingered hand, gloved perhaps like mine. And then the fingers moved. I flew up the stairs and crashed into my mother, almost knocking her down. I could barely form words, I was so frightened. My mother told my sister, still wet and wrapped in her towel, to go back upstairs and wait while we investigated. Normally she would have protested but she could see the fear in my face, and went back up to our bedroom. I shushed my mother as we crept down the stairs, brought her around and pointed at the bricks, at the hole in the wall. She moved slowly with me, and then closer to the hole, peered into it. “See?” I asked. “See the fingers?” She nodded―then reached in, touched the hand. “Clay,” she said. “It’s made of clay.” “I saw it move!” I said. “I heard it crying!” She gave me a stern look and was about to scold me―when the sobbing began once more. She looked at the wall, and then looked at me. “I know what this is,” she said. “And I know who we must call.” She ushered me back towards the stairs. I reached for the chain but she stopped me. “Leave the light on,” she said. “And be careful on the steps.” Two days later, very early in the morning, my mother answered a knock at the door and welcomed in an old woman, older than any I had ever known or seen. I never knew where she came from, or what her name was. The way she moved and spoke made me think of our village home but I did not remember ever meeting her. My mother handed her a small cloth bag which she tucked into her coat pocket, and then she walked directly to the kitchen and down into the basement. None of us followed. My legs ached from standing by the time she returned, though she could only have been gone a few minutes. She did not even try to take my mother aside―she addressed her directly in front of us, and this is what she said. “You must leave, before nightfall if at all possible. You can come back to the borderlands with me, if you wish. This is a stolen house, as is every chair and table and bed and bucket within its walls, stolen and now cursed. It belongs to the Yevrei, and the creature downstairs is a Golem―formed of clay by a master of the Kabbalah to protect the wife and child who lived here before you. The husband was taken by soldiers and executed; it is his soul which inhabits the monstrosity, and it is his heart that breaks with grief. For his wife and child were taken before he could possess the statue, and now they too are dead. He is trapped here, filled with rage and despair. You are in peril if you stay.” “You say this house is stolen,” said my mother, “but my sister Polina bought this house, she bought it for us to live in together.” “Your sister bought it from a thief, and she knew she was doing so. She knew the house, she came to see it while the family still lived here. She was the first victim of the Golem, and the thief who arranged the sale was the next. The Golem bears you no ill will, but he cannot let you stay.” “But you must be able to undo this,” my mother said. “Release his spirit, send him away.” “I cannot,” the old woman answered. “This is not our work, and it is not ours to undo. You would need to find the Kabbalist who conjured him. That of course is impossible now. Millions of the Yevrei are dead, and those that are not have escaped to other lands. He is condemned to live here forever, alone.” After a long silence, her eyes cast downward, my mother spoke. “I will pack our things,” she said. “We will leave with you.” “I must tell you,” the old woman sighed, “that the creature wants to see your boy. He will not be harmed. It should only take a moment.” She looked at me, reached out to take my hand. “Have you gone mad?” my mother exclaimed. “Leave that monster alone with my child?” “It is a monster with the soul of a man. Or, if you prefer, a man with the capabilities of a monster. Either way: It is a request that you cannot deny.” I took the old woman’s hand and went with her down the stairs, slowly and carefully, to face the creature in the wall. The bricks had now all fallen away, and I could see him fully from head to toe. He was terrifying in his stature, yet imbued with a strange beauty and created with obvious care. The old woman led me to stand at his feet, and he trembled all over. I was afraid he might shake himself apart. His tears had dug deep grooves from the corners of his eyes down his cheeks to his jaw. “You were a good man,” I told him, as if speaking to my own father. “You must forgive yourself.” The old woman reached across to him, pulled a piece of clay from the tip of the smallest finger on his left hand. She formed it into a ball, and handed it to me. “This clay will always be alive,” she said. “It will never dry or crack. And its spirit will always be with you. Take this, and always remember.” It has been many years. My mother is long dead. I have married, as has my sister. She has two daughters, and I have a son. We live in different cities now, all of us. I still have the ball of clay. It has neither dried nor cracked, and when I hold it, I still feel the life inside. --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • WINNER OF THE 2018 SUNBURST AWARD
  • NOMINATED FOR THE SHIRLEY JACKSON AWARD, AMAZON FIRST NOVEL AWARD, AND SCOTIABANK GILLER PRIZE
  • For two hundred years, the Grazyn porcelain factory built its reputation on its magnificent thimbles. It is said that even the Czarina Anastasia Romanova had received one in her trousseau. The workers come from the three neighboring villages on the border of Romania and Ukraine. Nourished, dressed and educated, they are the envy of all at a time when a famine programmed by Stalin sweeps the countryside and cannibalism rages from city to town to farm. But what is the secret of this factory and why does the Grazyn family protect its employees so scrupulously?
  • The Bone Mother
  • revives the great figures of Slavic mythology on the eve of the Second World War, from
  • rusalka
  • and Baba Yaga—The Bone Mother herself—to the golem. The existence of mortals is intimately linked to that of witches and vampires, in a universe where strigois rub shoulders with mermaids, ghosts and seers...and all are in peril from the
  • Nichni Politsiyi
  • , the Night Police, which wish to eradicate them.
  • 'A master of bowel-loosening terror'
  • The Globe and Mail
  • ‘Demchuk gracefully pieces together a dark and shining mosaic of a story with unforgettable imagery and elegant, evocative prose.’
  • Publishers Weekly (starred review)
  • ‘This is a book that bends genres, using the monsters of imagination as a back door to understanding the monsters of the real.’
  • Nino Ricci
  • Award-winning author David Demchuk was born and raised in Winnipeg and now lives in Toronto. He has been writing for print, stage, digital and other media for nearly 40 years.
  • The Bone Mother
  • is his first novel.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(90)
★★★★
25%
(75)
★★★
15%
(45)
★★
7%
(21)
23%
(68)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Beautiful/Poignant/Unforgettable!

I can sum this one up in two words: LOVED IT!

Told as a series of short stories, I adored the way THE BONE MOTHER was presented. Each tale was preceded by a photograph and I found that those photos gave a face to the characters in each vignette.

The tales themselves were very dark. They all came together,( mostly), at the end, to tell a story of pure evil. Told from Ukranian/Romanian points of view, these characters named horrors that I admittedly know little about: The Holodomor, for instance. Easily over 3 million dead, yet most Americans I've met know nothing about it. Why? References to Kristallnacht, and other horrific events in history also appear, all of which add to the darkness of this volume.

In some ways, though, these tales do have a lighter side to them-isn't often the darkest of times that bring out the best in people? These characters sacrificed and loved each other, despite the often miserable lives and events they faced. In that way, this book SHINES.

The writing was gorgeous and descriptive without being overly wordy. The presentation just blew me away. The photographs, the stories, the horror, the love and finally the darkness of it all-combined they make THE BONE MOTHER.

My HIGHEST recommendation!

*I received this paperback from the author with no strings attached. I read it, loved it and here we are!*