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March
2000
ISBN 921870-72-8
6 x 9
446 pp, $18.95
Novel

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Jackrabbit Moon
By Sheila McLeod Arnopoulos
This hard-hitting novel
explores the gritty underbelly of contemporary urban life
revealing the shocking chasm between demonized media images
and the everyday life of the uneducated poor. At the centre
is thirty-seven-year-old Maggie MacKinnan, a star
reporter at the Montreal Tribune who is wrenched from her
life of respectability when she meets Nick, a young
biker who has been arrested, along with his stripper
wife, Eileen, for causing the death of their infant
son. As a reporter covering the court case, Maggie is caught
between her newspaper's hunger for a sensational story about
child abuse and her own growing awareness that there are no
simple answers. Probing deeper into the child's death,
Maggie uncovers the reality of ordinary people with no
skills who are forced to live by any means. This is a
novel that removes the facade of the justice system, opens
the doors to the horror of prisons, and eventually reveals
what a thin line separates the conventional middle-class
person from the world of crime and prostitution. In the end,
Maggie is transformed by the darkness that she enters and,
so great is the skill of Arnopoulos as a novelist, even her
readers come back similarly changed.
"A compelling tale
about good and evil and the fine line that separates
them." —Josh Freed
An award-winning
investigative journalist, Sheila McLeod Arnopoulos is the
author of Voices from French Ontario and the co-author of
The English Fact in Quebec, which won a Governor General's
award for non-fiction. Both books were also translated into
French. A native of Montreal, Sheila teaches journalism at
Concordia University. Jackrabbit Moon is soon to be
published in a French translation by Editions Libre
Expression.
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