Preview
  • Snow Road Station

  • A Novel
  • By: Elizabeth Hay
  • Narrated by: Elizabeth Hay
  • Length: 6 hrs and 1 min
  • 4.8 out of 5 stars (4 ratings)

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Snow Road Station

By: Elizabeth Hay
Narrated by: Elizabeth Hay
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Publisher's summary

NATIONAL BESTSELLER • From the Giller Prize-winning author comes a novel, witty and wise, about thwarted ambition, unrealized dreams, the enduring bonds of female friendship, and love’s capacity to surprise us at any age.

"Joyous and lyrical." —Mary Lawson
"[In
Snow Road Station,] Hay makes a case for the simplicity of pleasure." —The New Yorker

In the winter of 2008, as snow falls without interruption, an actor in a Beckett play blanks on her lines. Fleeing the theatre, she beats a retreat into her past and arrives at Snow Road Station, a barely discernible dot on the map of Ontario.

The actor is Lulu Blake, in her sixties now, a sexy, seemingly unfooled woman well-versed in taking risks. Out of work, humiliated, she enters the last act of her life wondering what she can make of her diminished self. In Snow Road Station she decides she is through with drama, but drama, it turns out, isn’t through with her. She thinks she wants peace. It turns out she wants more.

Looming in the background is that autumn’s global financial meltdown, while in the foreground family and friends animate a round of weddings, sap harvests, love affairs, and personal turmoil. At the centre of it all is the lifelong friendship between Lulu and Nan. As the two women contemplate growing old, they surrender certain hard-held dreams and confront the limits of the choices they’ve made and the messy feelings that kept them apart for decades.

©2023 Elizabeth Hay (P)2023 Knopf Canada
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Critic reviews

“At the center of this sensitive novel, set in Ontario in 2008, is Lulu, a middle-aged actress who has returned to the hamlet of her youth for her nephew’s wedding. . . . Hay makes a case for the simplicity of pleasure: ‘All you have to do,” Lulu thinks, “is put yourself in the way of beauty, put yourself into the incredible swing of it.’” The New Yorker

“A moving novel about ageing and transformation. . . . Snow Road Station amazed me.” Peterborough Examiner

“Joyous and lyrical, Snow Road Station is an ode to the North, in fact an ode to life itself, and all its possibilities.” —Mary Lawson, bestselling author of A Town Called Solace

What listeners say about Snow Road Station

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Narration is terrible

I wish they had chosen a different narrator. Very monotonous and disengaging performance.
Im a quarter through it and not able to finish the story.
It has gotten such good reviews and I’m going to get the book right now to read it the ‚old fashioned‘ way.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Beautiful

Although this isn’t the best narration, the story is lyrical and immersive. It enveloped me in a cocoon of joy and peace, and being a small-town girl, now an older woman still in the city, I’m longing for the country. I’ll escape back to it ne of these days soon.
I got used to the author’s narration, and let this book take me in.

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1 person found this helpful