Picture of author.

Amanda Peters

Author of The Berry Pickers

1 Work 560 Members 24 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Amanda Peters

Works by Amanda Peters

The Berry Pickers (2023) 560 copies, 24 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
20th century
Gender
female

Members

Reviews

This is one for my DNF pile. Because it had so many glowing reviews I kept trying, but there's nothing I'm enjoying here. I've already figured out the end. Unsurprising plot with dreary characters.
 
Flagged
Eliz12 | 23 other reviews | Jul 4, 2024 |
The cover of this book is perfect. They say don't judge a book by its cover but it pleased me to walk by and see the bright cover on the table each day until I got back to reading it. The story was good, a little slow to start but geared up for the end and I liked it. I had also read another book, similar, missing children, and in hindsight I would have read them not so close together.
 
Flagged
mchwest | 23 other reviews | Jun 28, 2024 |
A wonderful book to listen to!!! Set partially in Maine, this story is a beautiful look at guilt, if that is a thing. Norma and Joe are such wonderful characters to get to know; ones that you will have a hard time letting go of and will be hard to forget. Their story is full of guilt and love and healing and emotion. It was a slow and steady listen that left me content and so happy I’d been able to snag the audio without a long wait! Enjoy!!
 
Flagged
snewell2 | 23 other reviews | Jun 24, 2024 |
Family, loss and devastating secrets lie at the heart of the story Amanda Peters tells in her slow-burning debut novel, The Berry Pickers. In 1962, a Nova Scotia Mi’kmaq family travels to Maine, where they have gone for many years to spend the summer picking berries. That year there are five children, the youngest, Ruthie, just four years old. One day, Ruthie and six-year-old Joe go off together to eat their lunch. Joe, distracted by something, leaves his sister on her own, and Ruthie goes missing. Peters’ novel traces the effects of this traumatic loss on Ruthie’s family while also providing the reader with a window into Ruthie’s adult years and her search for her true identity. Peters splits the narrative into two alternating threads. In the first we find Joe, now in his fifties, at home with his family after many years of self-imposed exile, obsessing over past mistakes and failures. Joe is dying of cancer. The other thread follows a character named Norma, an only child raised by a husband and wife in a comfortable New England setting. Though over-protective and tight lipped about the past, her parents have been good to her, and Norma’s life has been happy. But as she grows older, unsettling questions arise that pique her curiosity and raise suspicions that all is not as it should be—questions such as why are there no photos of her as an infant, and why is her skin darker than her parents’—questions that her mother and father seem at a loss to answer. Peters follows her two main characters through their middle years and into later life. Joe, tormented by guilt over being the last family member to see Ruthie before her disappearance, and anguished over the death of older brother Charlie, resorts to booze and violence. One night, after getting drunk and striking his wife hard enough to draw blood, he leaves Nova Scotia and his family, first heading west, then returning to Maine, where for many years he works as a farm hand and manual laborer. Norma, living in New England, studies literature in college, gets a teaching job, marries, divorces. But down through the years, the mystery of Ruthie’s disappearance continues to eat away at Joe and his family, and at the same time Norma’s questions about her own origins deepen. In her first novel Amanda Peters is less concerned with sustaining a mystery than with depicting the emotional toll of profound loss and dark family secrets on the human psyche. The reader will see the resolution coming, but this takes nothing away from the experience of reading the book because Peters finds other ways to generate suspense and wraps up her story in a manner that is satisfying dramatically. This is a novel that unapologetically touches the heart, but it also raises urgent questions about identity and social justice. Moving and often gripping, The Berry Pickers is a triumph of empathetic storytelling. It also announces Amanda Peters as a writer to watch.… (more)
½
 
Flagged
icolford | 23 other reviews | Jun 17, 2024 |

Lists

Awards

Statistics

Works
1
Members
560
Popularity
#44,620
Rating
4.0
Reviews
24
ISBNs
10
Languages
1

Charts & Graphs