Author:Connie May Fowler

In 1965 Bird, christened Avocet, aged six, is living with her family in a Florida citrus grove. Daddy and Mama, who run a general store, fight frequently and drink too much; Bird and her older sister Phoebe are beaten equally frequently. Daddy is eventually found dead in his car; Mama and the girls leave the grove and move into a trailer in the grounds of a motel outside Tampa. Bird, against Mama's wishes, makes friends with Miss Zora, a black woman in a neighbouring trailer. Miss Zora is a kindly white witch, whose wisdom and herbal remedies provide a mainstay in Bird's difficult life. Bird runs away to the city to escape her mother's cruelty, and meets a gentle biker who brings her home. Mama finally agrees to get help for her alcoholism, and Miss Zora takes Bird and Phoebe to live with her at her home in South Florida.
'There is no denying the depth of her talent and the breadth of her imagination'
—— The New York Times Book Review'A thing of heart-rending beauty, a moving exploration of love and loss, violence and grief, forgiveness and redemption'
—— Chicago Tribune'Stinging with tenderness, this is her best yet, a necessary story with an unstoppable emotional force'
—— Amy Tan, author of The Bonesetter's Daughter'A warm and lyrical writer who deserves to be better known'
—— Kate Atkinson, author of Human CroquetSubmergence succeeds, and is immensely pleasurable, because Ledgard's magnetic north - though incessantly insisted on - is such an uncanny, inhuman and deathly place
—— Toby Litt , New StatesmanFrom the icy depths of the Greenland Sea to the sweltering plains of a Somali Islamist training camp, Ledgard's masterful second novel is a beautifully crafted, rigorously researched, and deeply affecting love story
—— Monocle






