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Connie May Fowler (Writer) |
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Profile created April 11, 2008
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When Katie Wakes: A Memoir
(2002)
Connie May Fowler is known to the world as the author of bestselling
novels and powerful essays—but no one knew that for years she was the
victim of brutal abuse and relentless humiliation. Now in this
harrowing, spellbinding memoir, Fowler finally tells her own story.
The daughter and grand-daughter of battered women, Fowler found herself
irresistibly drawn to a man who was bent on destroying her, physically
and emotionally. Despite her youth, spirit, education, and wonderful
talent, she was trapped in a cycle of violence and despair with no way
out. Until the day she adopted an incredible puppy she named Kateland.
With stunning candor, Connie May Fowler reveals how the unconditional
love and loyalty of this dog helped her turn the corner, find a safe
place, and reclaim her own life. A work of extraordinary passion and
courage, When Katie Wakes holds out hope and inspiration to anyone who
has ever dreamed of starting over.
The Problem with Murmur Lee: A Novel
(2005)
The bestselling author of Before Women Had Wings spins a wild new tale
about the strong bonds among a group of friends that loses its quirkiest
member, Murmur Lee. Exploring new literary territory while keeping to
her native Floridian roots, Fowler is here at her most original and
entertaining.
As a new year dawns over the island of Iris Haven, Murmur Lee Harp and
her lover, Billy, go for a romantic sail without a care in the world.
The evening comes to an abrupt halt when Murmur Lee discovers that she
has drowned—but by whose hand?—in the Iris Haven river.
Grief-stricken and haunted by the mysteries surrounding her death,
Murmur Lee’s circle of friends sets out to discover what really happened
to her, and in the process they learn as much about her failings and
triumphs as their own. After years of self-exile in the North, Charlee
Mudd returns to set her best friend’s affairs in order, only to confront
her own ghosts. Edith Piaf, a former marine whose sex change at the age
of sixty-two Murmur Lee supported unquestioningly, must find the
confidence to carry on without the encouragement of her friend. Lonely
widower Dr. Zachary Klein plummets into the depths of depression at the
loss of the second woman he has ever loved. As for Murmur Lee—who lived
her entire life on an island named by her great-great grandfather in
honor of the Greek goddess who receives the souls of dying women—in
death she experiences her own journey as she is plunged into her
familial past and discovers the truth about who she really is.
With poignancy and humor Fowler weaves the voices of Murmur and her
friends into a compelling narrative. Part family saga, part murder
mystery, The Problem with Murmur Lee is Fowler’s most rewarding and
engrossing work yet.
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My Lady Schemer (2001)
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Remembering Blue (2000)
From Connie May Fowler, author of the bestselling and award-winning
Before Women Had Wings, comes a maritime saga and extraordinary love
story between Mattie Blue and her husband, Nick, a fisherman on a small
Florida island. Recently widowed and filled with grief, Mattie spins a
tale of her beloved husband--his birth, his death, his love of the sea,
his haunted fear of a family legend of drowning, and their romantic,
unflagging devotion to each other.
Setting out to build a new life far removed from her lonely childhood,
twenty-two-year-old Mattie expects another dull, efficient working day
at the Suwannee Swifty convenience store when Proteus Nicholas Blue
stops in and changes her life. Two days after leaving his large,
nurturing Greek family on the small island of Lethe, Nick believes he
has given up the sea, with its magic and its danger, for good, but their
love transforms them both. As she struggles to build a new life--first
with and later without Nick, surrounded by her new relatives--we
discover along with her the infinite sources of strength to be found in
familiar places, the comfort of family, and the healing power of memory.
Connie May Fowler is that rare author who is both elegant in her writing
and passionate in her storytelling. Although her latest novel begins in
the aftermath of a tragic event, her accomplished storytelling reveals
how the life-affirming humor, joy, and incredible love between two
people can make them so much more than they were alone. An exploration
of grief and transcendence, Remembering Blue is as much about the allure
and mysteries of the village as about the people who inhabit it. It is
an unforgettable, beautifully told story that will affirm Connie May
Fowler's place at the forefront of American writers.
Mattie Fiona Blue, recently widowed and filled with grief, spins a tale
of her beloved husband, Nick--his birth, his death, his love of the sea,
his haunted fear of a family legend of drowning, and their romantic,
unflagging devotion to each other. In Mattie's courageous and stubborn
telling of the story, we find REMEMBERING BLUE's true power: its quiet
insistence that the living and the dead, the past and the present, the
ancient and the yet-to-be, reside within us, coexisting, via memory,
story, and myth.
While mourning Nick, Mattie tells us of her own life as she journeys
from the loneliness of a broken home and disapproving mother to the
chaotic, mythic, abundant sphere of Nick Blue and his sprawling
Greek-American fishing family, whose ties to the sea extend across
generations, continents, and time. On the bridgeless island of Lethe,
Nick's family's home, in the midst of isolation and nature's bounty,
Mattie comes into her own, navigating through the complex joys and
demands of her new family even as she begins to see with wiser eyes the
ocean's duality.
An exploration of grief and transcendence, REMEMBERING BLUE is as much
about the allure and mysteries of the village as about the people who
live there. It is an unforgettable, beautifully told story that will
affirm Connie May Fowler's place at the forefront of American writers.
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Before Women Had Wings (1996)
My name is Avocet Abigail Jackson. But because Mama couldn't find anyone
who thought Avocet was a fine name for a child, she called me Bird.
Which is okay by me. She named both her children after birds, her logic
being that if we were named for something with wings then maybe we'd be
able to fly above the shit in our lives. . . .
So says Bird Jackson, the mesmerizing narrator of Connie May Fowler's
vivid and brilliantly written, Before Women Had
Wings.
Starstruck by a dime-store picture of Jesus, Bird fancies herself "His
girlfriend" and embarks upon a spiritual quest for salvation, even as
the chaos of her home life plunges her into a stony silence. In stark
and honest language, she tells the tragic life of her father, a
sweet-talking wanna-be country music star, tracks her older sister's
perilous journey into womanhood, and witnesses her mother make a
courageous and ultimately devastating decision.
Yet most profound is Bird's own story--her struggle to sift through the
ashes of her parents' lives, her meeting with Miss Zora, a healer whose
prayers over the bones of winged creatures are meant to guide their
souls to heaven, and her will to make sense of a world where fear is
more plentiful than hope, retribution more valued than love. . .
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River of Hidden Dreams (1994)
Forty-something Sadie Hunter is a loner. But more than that, she is
afraid of not being alone. Ever since her mother and Native American
grandmother died together when she was a child, dancing cheek-to-cheek
in a saloon in the middle of a violent storm, Sadie hasn't let anyone
get too close. Not even Carlos, a passionate Cuban who sees the rich
soul that Sadie tries to hide from herself.
Cynical and loveless, she becomes obsessed with learning more about her
unacknowledged identity, torn apart by tragic family legends she can't
quite believe. And although she tries to fight it, she half suspects
that with Carlos's help, she could find the truth of the past, and it
could set her free....
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Sugar Cage (1992)
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