
Winner of Canada's Governor General's Award for Fiction
Pennsylvania, 1798. Daniel Dickinson, a devout Quaker, has just lost his wife. When he marries a fifteen-year-old Methodist orphan to help with his five small children, his fellow Quakers disown him for his impropriety. Forced out of the only community he's ever known, Daniel moves his family to the Virginia frontier. He has in hand a few land warrants, with which he plans to establish his new homestead.Linda Spalding was born and raised in Kansas. She is the author of three previous novels and two acclaimed works of nonfiction, A Dark Place in the Jungle, which was short-listed for the Trillium Book Award and the Pearson Writers' Non-Fiction Prize, and Who Named the Knife. The Purchase received Canada's prestigious Governor General's Award for English-language fiction. Spalding lives in Toronto, where she is an editor of Brick magazine.
"Singular. . . . A wonderful novel. . . . The realities of the characters, their fears and other emotions, are both individual and universal." --John Irving
"Powerful. . . . Passages of pure poetry. . . . [Spalding's] novel claws at the deepest nerve of American history." --The Rumpus "Haunting and beautiful. . . . Brilliantly depicts the indelible stain that slavery has left on the moral fabric of America." --Richmond Times-Dispatch "Beautifully written, emotionally evocative, gripping, engaging, and truthful." --The New York Journal of Books "Engrossing. . . . One of the finest historical novels in recent years." --National Post "Eerily compelling. . . . Haunting. . . . Mesmerizing lyricism. . . . Imbued with the power of myth." --The Globe and Mail (Toronto) "Grippingly immersive. . . . Visceral, emotionally resonant." --The Toronto Star