Saturday, July 5, 2025

LUNA

 Sharon Butala. LUNA. Harper, 1988.


Enjoyed reading this story of the lives of women in rural Saskatchewan at the end of the 20th century. Although the emphasis on community feels a bit romanticized, and the emphasis on the inability to make a living in agriculture is a bit dismal, the variety of reactions from the variety of women, of all ages, is enlightening. As is the unimaginative, often dismissive attitude of the men towards their wives and daughters and the assumption that only the man makes the decisions.

I did feel that the cramped format of the book was rushed and did not do the novel justice. It seemed to lack room to breathe or space to pause and take stock. The plot about an unplanned teen pregnancy made me even more glad to have matured after the invention of the pill although I do agree with one of the narrator's points, that even when we know, many important truths are not transmitted from one generation to the next in time, before it is too late. Another kind of cultural failure.

The descriptions of the natural setting are achingly beautiful. 

Found this copy in the bargain bins outside the Bookman.

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LUNA

 Sharon Butala. LUNA. Harper, 1988. Enjoyed reading this story of the lives of women in rural Saskatchewan at the end of the 20th century. A...