Joan Barfoot is one of those novelists like Carol Shields you want to tell your friends about. She's just so good on people and the workings of the human heart- shrewd, generous, funny and wise.
The catastrophic collison between the worlds of Isla, a middle-aged woman, and Roddy, a drifter and would-be robber is more tragic than that in 'Getting Over Edgar' but deeper, too. Isla's family rage and despair, and her sufferings as the result of a broken spine are paralleled with those of Roddy in jail. Yet there is another link between them. Isla's beautiful daughter, who has been under the spell of a sinister guru, becomes Roddy's unexpected saviour. To say more would be to give away too much, but this is as good as Carol Shields, any day.