
The Winterpoor
George Michelsen Foy(Author)
Sea Crow Press
Published on 4. November 2025
Book
Paperback/Softback
276 pages
978-1-961864-34-4 (ISBN)
Description
In a unique and groundbreaking novel that gives voice to the silent residents of Cape Cod, Murdo Peters, an artist and Cape native, must struggle for his own sanity and freedom as he tries to care for a mentally challenged and neglected boy while also salvaging the floating studio of a long-dead artist, navigating a doomed marriage, and attempting to make his own art. All this on the real Cape, not the sunny beaches and lighthouses of the tourist resort, but the dark Cape of the off-season, its environment stressed by pollution and greedy developers, its year-round residents racked by storms, addiction and poverty. As the perils to himself, to the boy, to Daisy (his new love interest) threaten to overwhelm them all, Murdo must draw on his deepest reserves of courage and hope to defeat the demons of his past and defend the people, and the peninsula, he loves.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 203 mm
Width: 133 mm
Thickness: 16 mm
Weight
290 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-961864-34-4 (9781961864344)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
George Michelsen Foy is the author of 14 published novels: the latest, The Last Green Light, in May of 2024 with Guernica Editions; other novels were published by Viking Penguin, Bantam Doubleday, University Press of New England (as GF Michelsen), Éditions Globophile (Paris), Bastei Lubbe (Germany); and 3 works of non-fiction (Scribner / Simon & Schuster, and Macmillan / Flatiron). His long-form non-fiction has been published in Harper’s, Rolling Stone, the New York Times, etc.; fiction in Notre Dame Review, Ep;phany Journal, Washington Square Review, etc. He has worked as illustrator and editor (for the International Herald Tribune and the Cape Cod Register, among others); also as merchant marine officer, commercial cod-fisherman, lobsterman, construction worker and factory hand. A native of Cape Cod, he was educated at the London School of Economics and Bennington College's MFA program, teaches creative writing at New York University, lives in Barnstable County, is a recipient of an NEA fellowship in fiction and other awards, and finds writers' biographies amusing.