A Dream of Wolves: A Novel

A Dream of Wolves: A Novel

by Michael C. White
A Dream of Wolves: A Novel

A Dream of Wolves: A Novel

by Michael C. White

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Overview

From the author of the critically acclaimed novels A Brother's Blood and The Blind Side of the Heart comes a brilliant tale of a decent man's struggle to choose between his past and his future, between the woman he once loved and the woman he now loves.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780061860195
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 04/16/2024
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 404
File size: 718 KB

About the Author

About The Author

Michael White's previous novels include the New York Times Notable Book A Brother's Blood as well as The Garden of Martyrs and Soul Catcher, both Connecticut Book of the Year finalists. He is the director of Fairfield University's MFA program in creative writing, and lives in Connecticut.


Michael White's previous novels include the New York Times Notable Book A Brother's Blood as well as The Garden of Martyrs and Soul Catcher, both Connecticut Book of the Year finalists. He is the director of Fairfield University's MFA program in creative writing, and lives in Connecticut.

Hometown:

Guilford, CT, USA

Date of Birth:

1952

Place of Birth:

Hartford, CT, USA

Education:

University of Connecticut - B.A., English; M.A., English, 1975, 1977; University of Denver - Ph.D., English

Read an Excerpt

Chapter One

"Gotcha one, Doc," came Cecil Clegg's familiar twang on the other end of the phone. His voice syrupy-thick, urgent, slightly bovine, what I imagine an unmilked cow sounding like if a cow could talk. That chewing-on-cud hillbilly accent, the vowels all drawn out and masticated to hell.

Fuzzy-headed, I glanced at the bedside digital clock, which proclaimed, in letters so red they seared the darkness like a branding iron, 2:13. The familiar dream I was having when Cecil called still hovered uneasily nearby. Will. I'd been dreaming about him a lot lately. In it he'd had his own dream. A dream within a dream, like one of those Chinese boxes Annabel used to collect. As if in a Grimm fairy-tale, he'd awakened from a nightmare with wolves chasing him through some dark wood, and had run into our room and clambered into bed with us.

He'd gone through a period when he used to have bad dreams involving wolves. I'm not sure why. We don't have any in these mountains. Though there's a Wolf Knob and a Wolf Lake three miles east of here, wolves have been extinct in the southern Blue Ridge for more than half a century. Maybe it was some book we read to him or just his child's fertile imagination. In any case, wolves terrified him. Each night he'd insist I look under the bed to make sure none were lurking there, that his window was locked. Despite these precautions, he'd sometimes wake from a nightmare and make a dash for our room. He'd crawl between Annabel and me, smelling vaguely of urine and fear, his small heart beating like a drum. A wolf was after me, Dad, he'd say. He had these big teeth. I'd tell him everything was fine,that it was just a dream, as if that made his fear any less real. My own dream seemed so real I found myself patting the far side of the bed, as if searching for him. But it was empty, of course, the sheets cool as rubbing alcohol on the skin.

"Y'all there, Doc?" Cecil asked, interrupting my thoughts.

I felt an odd sensation in the back of my head, an unpleasant kind of tickle, as if someone were teasing my brain with a feather. I was still half asleep. I'd been at the hospital until eleven with a protracted labor, and, pooped but wired as I always am after such a birth, it was nearly one before two glasses of Scotch had induced sleep in me. What I wanted more than anything was for Cecil to be just a dream so I could crawl back into my other dream and lie there holding my son. But duty called.

"I'm here," I said at last.

"You are covering tonight, right?"

"I'm covering," I replied. "What's up?"

"For a minute I thought maybe I should've been bothering Dr. Neinhuis."

"No, you're bothering the right fellow. Rob went over to Charlotte to be with his in-laws for Christmas."

"I don't mind saying I prefer working with you anyway, Doc."

"'Preciate that, Cecil," I said, dropping syllables, which you tend to do after being here as long as I have. It's not so much an effort to fit in, plane the edges off my sharp New England accent, as it is pure contagion. Or sheer laziness. I'm not sure which. "What do you have?"

"Not that I got anything against Neinhuis, mind you," he said, ignoring me. "It's just his manner I don't take to."

"Rob's a little high-strung."

"I'll say. He lets you know right quick he's the doctor. And you're just some redneck peckerwood with a badge."

"So what's up?" I asked, growing impatient.

"Not like you, Doc. You're regular folk. Or almost," he added with a snicker.

"You didn't call at two in the morning to tell me I'm regular folk."

He laughed nervously. "Sorry. Got us a homicide."

He never liked to tell me straight out why he was calling. He had this exasperating habit of making small talk, giving it to me a little bit at a time, almost as if he feared that if he dumped it on me all at once, I just might hang up on him and go back to bed. Which I sometimes had a good mind to do. Yet I knew when Cecil Clegg, the Hubbard County sheriff, called in the middle of the night like this it could only mean one thing: He wanted me to pronounce somebody. Pronounce, the way you would a word, or two people man and wife. Only in this case it was saying they were legally, certifiably dead. Cecil wanted me to drag my butt out of a nice warm bed and accompany him to some sordid spot where death had left its signature. To drive out with him to a cold, dark stretch of mountain road or hoof it into the woods or climb down into someone's dank-smelling cellar. All those places people choose (if they're lucky) or have chosen for them (if they're not) as the spot where they'll breathe their last.

It might be some trucker, say, who'd fallen asleep at the wheel while hauling logs over to Knoxville. Or a girl who'd made the mistake of hitchhiking home after the high school dance and was just another face on a poster until some fisherman snagged her moon-pale thigh with his Rapala out at Glenwood Lake. Or a kid from the college who'd gone backpacking alone in the mountains, got himself good and lost, and what was left of him in the spring after crows and wild dogs got through with him would fit in a violin case.

A Dream of Wolves. Copyright © by Michael White. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Reading Group Guide

About the Book
Hubbard County, North Carolina. The heart of the Southern Blue Ridge mountains is an isolated place of rugged beauty. Its people are close-knit, wary of outsiders, labeled as backwards hillbillies. Dr. Stuart Jordan, a transplanted Yankee, has spent nearly thirty years trying to understand and to help these people. At 57, Doc, as his friends call him, is a man who lives a quiet life in the small mountain town of Slade. Since the tragic death of his son fourteen years earlier, he has a thrown himself into his work: by day he runs an OB/GYN practice, delivering babies and tending to women, while he moonlights as the town's medical examiner, as he puts it, "working the other end of the line." He has dedicated himself to caring for his mentally ill wife, Annabel, a former artist. Driven by drugs, alcohol, and her own raging demons, Annabel has become a drifter, a street person who floats in and out of his life, wreaking havoc. For months, sometimes even years, he won't hear from her. Just when he allows himself to consider a future, out of the blue his estranged wife will show up at his doorstep, or he'll get a call from a hospital asking him to come and get her. There in the farmhouse on Shadow Mountain, he'll nurse her back to health only to see her leave him once more. Though he knows the only answer is divorce, Doc can never quite bring himself to abandon the woman he once loved, and so he remains locked in this unhappy cycle.

One night Doc is called out to the scene of a brutal murder. An Indian woman, Rosa Littlefoot, has gunned down her abusive lover, Lee Roy Pugh, a white man related to a violent hill clan. When Doc arrives, the woman is holding herbaby, refusing to give it up. Cecil, the county sheriff, asks Doc to intervene, hoping to get the baby safely away from her. He succeeds but gets more than he bargains for. Before she gives her baby up, Rosa extracts a promise from Doc: to see to it that her child is looked after while she's in jail. Thus, is Doc slowly drawn into a tangled web of lives and conflicts: those of Rosa and her baby, the backwoods Pugh clan, and Bobbie Tisdale, the local D.A., a beautiful woman who has recently become Doc's lover. There is also the secret Rosa shares with no one. And finally, of course, there is Annabel.

Questions for Discussion

  • Like many physicians, Stuart "Doc" Jordan, the narrator of the novel, works long hours. Is there any reason in his particular circumstance why he puts in such long hours?

  • Doc Jordan is, as he himself admits and as his friend, Cecil Clegg says, a Yankee, an outsider in this insular world of mountain people. What makes him such an ideal narrator? Why not a narrator who is from Hubbard County?

  • The Prologue begins with the following quote: "What I know of death is how hard we work to deserve it and how little we appreciate it when it finally comes." Given what happens later in the novel, what is the significance of this statement?

  • The women in Doc's life, his estranged wife Annabel and his new lover Bobbie, have very different personalities. What attracts Doc to each woman? Does he love each one?

  • Babies as well as the process of childbearing is very important to the novel. Discuss the various ways babies and woman giving birth are significant to the story.

  • The Appalachian Mountains and its people have been portrayed in various stereotypical ways, from Lil Abner to Deliverance. Doc himself admitted that when he first came to the region he also harbored similar stereotypes. Yet he says, "Slade, like most of the new South, was rapidly changing, sloughing off its small-town, bible-thumping, good-ole-boy skin." Discuss the ways the area is changing, breaking away from those stereotypes, and the effects those changes are having on its people and their traditions.

  • Doc Jordan is a man who is confronted by several moral, emotional, and legal choices? What are those choices and what are the repercussions of each?

  • There are several contradictions in Doc's life. For example, his day job, as he calls it, is nurturing life while his night job, that of part-time ME, is "working the other end of the line." Discuss this and other contradictions in his life.

  • Though Annabel says she wants Stu to be happy she continually returns and throws his life into chaos. Why does she keep coming back and why does he keep taking her in?

  • Several other women are important to Doc. Who are they and how are they significant to him? How do they affect him?

  • After Doc's meeting with Leonard Blackfox, when he learns about the events of the night of the murder, there's one thing that is still unclear to Doc. What is it and how does he handle it?

  • Dreams are an important device in the novel, starting right with the title. Discuss how dreams are used here.

  • At the end of the novel, Annabel leaves. However, even now Doc imagines her calling or returning some day. Do you think she will return?

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