Green Fuse Burning

Subjects
- FICTION / Horror
- FICTION / LGBTQ+ / Lesbian
- FICTION / Indigenous
Tags
bipoc representation, horror, lesbian protagonist, native protagonist, queer representationThe debut novella from the Elgin Award winning author of Elegies of Rotting Stars.
After the death of her estranged father, artist Rita struggles with grief and regret. There was so much she wanted to ask him-about his childhood, their family, and the Mi'kmaq language and culture from which Rita feels disconnected. But when Rita's girlfriend Molly forges an artist's residency application on her behalf, winning Rita a week to paint at an isolated cabin, Rita is both furious and intrigued. The residency is located where her father grew up.
On the first night at the cabin, Rita wakes to strange sounds. Was that a body being dragged through the woods? When she questions the locals about the cabin's history, they are suspicious and unhelpful. Ignoring her unease, Rita gives in to dark visions that emanate from the forest's lake and the surrounding swamp. She feels its pull, channelling that energy into art like she's never painted before. But the uncanny visions become more insistent, more intrusive, and Rita discovers that in the swamp's decay the end of one life is sometimes the beginning of another.
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On the first page we learn that Mi'kmaq artist Rita Francis has vanished during her artist residency in a remote cabin in the wetlands, leaving behind only her most inspired work yet. Each chapter begins with a gallery's description of her vivid mixed medium creations depicting unsettling images of dark figures embedded in scenes of ecological collapse. Green Fuse Burning reflects on, and is itself an example of, the ways we document global horrors such as climate change and grieve personal and cultural loss.
Content Warnings: death of a parent, suicide, body horror, toxic relationship
Product Details
- Paperback
- 112 pages
- ISBN
- 9781778092664
- Publisher
- Stelliform Press (10/31/23)
- Dimensions
- 6 x 0.2 x 9 inches
- Subjects
Subjects
- FICTION / Horror
- FICTION / LGBTQ+ / Lesbian
- FICTION / Indigenous
- Tags
Tags
bipoc representation, horror, lesbian protagonist, native protagonist, queer representation