Labrador, Kathryn Davis
Labrador, Kathryn Davis
1 Rating(s)
List: $16.95 | Sale: $11.87
Club: $8.47

Labrador
A Novel

Author: Kathryn Davis

Narrator: Elisabeth Rodgers

Unabridged: 7 hr 56 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 09/17/2019


Synopsis

Kathryn Davis’s riveting debut about the indelible pacts and hidden hatreds of sisterhoodLabrador is the story of two unforgettable sisters. Willie, the eldest, is willful, beautiful, and wayward; to Kitty, the youngest, she is the radiant center around which everything revolves. Kitty, too, is willful, but in the brooding manner of the inveterate loner. She is the one who is visited by an angel, Rogni, who reshapes her beliefs by telling her eerie, enigmatic fables that defy time and place, parables about bears, martyrs, and imprisoned daughters that seem to contain warnings about betrayals and violence to come. In the pared-down landscape of the far north, where the girls’ grandfather has his home, Kitty escapes the orbit of her sister and begins to come to terms with the demons—and the enchantments—that have been her birthright from the start.Kathryn Davis conjures a bewitching tale of the rifts and reparation that occur between two girls who are nothing alike but have only each other to turn to, all the while destabilizing our assumptions about what a coming-of-age story is supposed to be. In Labrador one can find the origins of Davis’s hallmark lyricism and startling narrative swerves, her layered atmospherics, her fierce intelligence and wit, and above all the wild and transformative qualities of her imagination.

About Kathryn Davis

Kathryn Davis has received a Kafka Prize for fiction by an American woman, the Morton Dauwen Zabel Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. She teaches in the graduate program at Washington University in St. Louis. The Thin Place is her sixth novel.

About Elisabeth Rodgers

What do you do with a BA in English from Princeton University? You go to New York to pursue an acting career, and end up putting all of your skills together as an audiobook narrator. Elisabeth Rodgers first started recording audiobooks for the National Library Service of the Library of Congress at the American Foundation for the Blind (Talking Book Productions) in New York City. After she had numerous titles under her belt, she branched out, and has since narrated over 100 titles for a variety of publishers. She was the recipient of an Audie Award for the full-cast recording of Sherlock's Secret Life in 2000. Her work on The Last Chinese Chef, Annexed, The Naked Eye, and Mapping the Heavens garnered AudioFile magazine's prized Earphones Awards, and she was lucky enough to join the star-studded cast of Audible, Inc.'s Audie-nominated production of The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty, as well as the Earphones-winning MetaBook audio-drama production of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. Elisabeth continues to work both onstage and in the studio. She lives in the Lower East Side of New York City.


Reviews

Goodreads review by karen on April 30, 2009

shes so good i could swear she was canadian.........more

Goodreads review by Grace on March 29, 2025

Still the best still my favorite......more

Goodreads review by Arielle on December 15, 2024

Kathryn Davis really is THAT good. This book is somehow at once very dense and a twisted, imaginative page-turner. There are action sequences and fairytales and angels and bear sex and achingly gorgeous sentences. Pure magic.......more

Goodreads review by Michael on January 08, 2020

Stunning. A magical book.......more

Goodreads review by Joe on March 31, 2025

I am not as bright as I pretend to be. This is an interesting journey this book. I recognize the depth, and it is littered with references I almost know enough to recognize, but I fear a good amount of what was included in the book went past me. Still, I can say I enjoyed it quite a bit. This is the......more


Quotes

“A disturbing yet lyrical portrait of two sisters and the peculiar dream world they inhabit…Davis demonstrates a formidable talent for capturing the savage confusions of youth.” New York Times

“A mysterious, magical book, brimming with haunting images.” Publishers Weekly