If you would like to review and/or do a giveaway for the paperback edition of

A Change in Altitude By Anita Shreve
please reply here and sign up for your review copy here: http://snurl.com/vuduu

 

In order to participate, you must link to the Reading Group Guide, belong to a book club, and also promote the book to your book club. We have limited copies available for giveaway and will give priority to book bloggers and book reviewers. Selected bloggers will have a choice of offering 1-3 copies per site.

 

Reading Group Guide

 

Margaret and Patrick have been married just a few months when they set off on what they hope will be a great adventure-a year living in Kenya. Margaret quickly realizes there is a great deal she doesn't know about the complex mores of her new home, and about her own husband.

A British couple invites the newlyweds to join on a climbing expedition to Mount Kenya, and they eagerly agree. But during their harrowing ascent, a horrific accident occurs. In the aftermath of the tragedy, Margaret struggles to understand what happened on the mountain and how these events have transformed her and her marriage, perhaps forever.

A Change in Altitude illuminates the inner landscape of a couple, the irrevocable impact of tragedy, and the elusive nature of forgiveness. With stunning language and striking emotional intensity, Anita Shreve transports us to the exotic panoramas of Africa and into the core of our most intimate relationships.

 


 
 

 

Article: A Change in Altitude

 

ANITA SHREVE began writing fiction while working as a high school teacher. Although one of her first published stories, "Past the Island, Drifting," was awarded an O. Henry Prize in 1975, Shreve felt she couldn't make a living as a fiction writer so she became a journalist. She traveled to Africa, and spent three years in Kenya, writing articles that appeared in magazines such as Quest, US, and Newsweek. Back in the United States, she turned to raising her children and writing freelance articles for magazines. Shreve later expanded two of these articles — both published in the New York Times Magazine — into the nonfiction books Remaking Motherhood and Women Together, Women Alone. At the same time Shreve also began working on her first novel, Eden Close. With its publication in 1989, she gave up journalism for writing fiction full time, thrilled, as she says, with "the rush of freedom that I could make it up."

 

Since Eden Close Anita Shreve has written eleven other novels: Strange Fits of Passion, Where or When, Resistance, The Weight of Water, The Pilot's Wife, Fortune's Rocks, The Last Time They Met, Sea Glass, All He Ever Wanted, Light on Snow, A Wedding in December and, most recently, Body Surfing. In 1998 Shreve received the PEN/L. L. Winship Award and the New England Book Award for fiction.

Views: 0

Replies to This Discussion

I've signed up to do a review and giveaway. Thanks, Valerie!
Thanks - I would like to do a review and giveaway!
I'd love to do a giveaway and review on this title. I'd also like to promote and discuss in my book club.
I'm assuming since the signup URL is still open that there are still review copies available, please let me know otherwise.
Thanks :)
I received my copy in the mail today. Thanks so much.
Will we be contacted by email to know if we should do a giveaway as well?

majik.of.mystee(at)gmail(dot)com

RSS

Need help?

Badge

Loading…

© 2013   Created by Tricia.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service