Rabu, 24 Oktober 2012

The Cabin, by Smoky Zeidel

The Cabin, by Smoky Zeidel

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The Cabin, by Smoky Zeidel

The Cabin, by Smoky Zeidel



The Cabin, by Smoky Zeidel

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James-Cyrus Hoffmann has just inherited his grandfather's farm, and with it a mysterious cabin deep in the woods on Hoffmann mountain, a cabin he has dreamed about since childhood. When James-Cyrus enters the cabin, he is vaulted back through time to the Civil War era, where he meets Elizabeth, the brave young woman who lives there, and Malachi, a runaway slave. James-Cyrus' neighbor, Cora, knows all too well the tragic history of the cabin. When James-Cyrus tells Cora about Elizabeth, Malachi, and his fantastic vault back through time, the two devise a plan to change the past and right a wrong that has haunted the Hoffmann family for generations. But can they find the key to unlock the past in time to change what history said happened to Elizabeth and Malachi?

The Cabin, by Smoky Zeidel

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #6002969 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-11-05
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .45" w x 6.00" l, .59 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 196 pages
The Cabin, by Smoky Zeidel

Review Mysterious and masterfully crafted, Smoky Trudeau Zeidel's The Cabin draws the reader into a world in which reality swims, and truth is a thread of love through time. When protagonist James-Cyrus Hoffman inherits his grandfather's farm, he discovers he has inherited more than land, his lineage bearing the passions, transgressions, and scars of his ancestors. A thoughtful, provocative, satisfying story that challenges not only the protagonist's sense of time and place but the reader's as well. --Patricia Damery, author of Snakes, and Farming Soul: A Tale of InitiationSmoky Trudeau Zeidel brings to this magical and compelling historical fantasy an obvious and highly detailed love of plants and animals, mountains, dreams, and the old wisdom of one attuned to the mysteries of the natural world. --Malcolm R. Campbell, Campbell Editorial, author of The Sun Singer and SarabandeA breathtaking journey back and forth through time, through dream-space, and through magical realms. A celebration of the power of love and reverence for life that knows no limits or bounds. --Donna Henes, author of The Queen of My Self

About the Author Smoky Zeidel is a poet and novelist whose love of the natural world is thematic in all she writes. She taught writing and creativity workshops for many years at venues throughout the Midwest before succumbing to her bohemian urges and moving to Southern California. Her work has earned her five nominations for the prestigious Pushcart Prize. Smoky lives in a ramshackle cottage in the hills outside Los Angeles with her husband Scott and a plethora of animals, both domestic and wild.


The Cabin, by Smoky Zeidel

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Most helpful customer reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Smoky Zeidel does it again By Joey Madia Smoky Zeidel is a writer who, when they produce something new, leads us to drop everything, get a firm hold of their book, and carve out ample time to dive deeply beneath the waters of their words for as long as the capacity of our mental lungs to hold our breath allows. I cannot tell you much about the story told in The Cabin. Or, more accurately, I choose not to. Because almost anything I would tell beyond the broad strokes in the next paragraph would ruin your experience. Muddy the waters into which you have to dive. And it’s harder to hold your breath with the silt of story give-aways floating about.I can tell you that The Cabin’s characters are primarily a family who has lived in the same geographical area—the Allegheny Mountains of (West) Virginia for many generations—who have seen the best and worst of humankind through the American Civil War, slavery, and the changes that came with the new century. I can tell you that the story involves fairy stones, and the Power of Belief to defy all temporal–spatial barriers. And I can tell you that it involves, as my title gives away, Time Travel.What I should have named the review is “Time Travel Made (to Look) Easy,” although that does not exactly roll off the tongue, which would be a particular disservice to Zeidel, because she truly is a Technician: her sentences move like the rivers and winds she often writes about in her poetry and prose. And I say that it is Made (to Look) Easy because, true to her strengths as a Technician, the complex plot, moving as it does between time and space, never carries the thornier burdens of that trope, as it often does with the stories told by, for instance, J. J. Abrams or James Cameron (each of whom are masterful Storyteller-Technicians). I think that is because, in The Cabin, it is not science fiction; it not a clever device employed for jazzy storytelling. It is an inherent, crucial part of the tale Zeidel tells, and, like the audience who brings Tinkerbell back to life in stagings of Peter Pan through the Power of Belief, we as readers must contribute to making the magic happen. Yes, of course, it ends how it ends, but how much we invest is up to us.I invested deeply, which speaks to Zeidel’s ability as a Storyteller. She blends her thorough, far-ranging research (once again, the Technician) with exquisitely drawn characters, a beautiful way of describing geography, and a knack for bleeding things down to core emotional values that puts her writing on a mythological level. I felt it in The Storyteller’s Bracelet, in her recent book of poetry, and here in The Cabin. You cannot teach that. It begins as a natural gift, coupled with tens of thousands of hours with pen in hand or fingers on a keyboard.In a world where jazzy tropes like CGI and gravity-defying fights are the new standard for what passes as storytelling, books like The Cabin and writers like Smoky Zeidel remind us that there is much, much more, if only we know where to look.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. A mother's love transcends time By Sherri Morris Corrine finds a beautiful stone that although she was raised to acknowledge the magic of the mountains, she fails to realize their magic. ~30 years later in a time realm not her own, she finally understands. Is it in time to save her daughter? And will her granddaughter understand 13 years later?I was given this title for free with my agreement to write a review. It has been my pleasure to read this tale and I wish Miss Zeidel a long and successful career.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. The Cabin By Linda Kopit This story was fascinating! Set between two time periods it involves family members living on a mountain. Strong family connections and mountain magic in the form of fairy stones along with time travel reel you in. Feels like you are there with the characters and are experiencing what's happening along with them. Couldn't put it down! I received this book for free in exchange for my honest review.

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