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Named one of the year's best books by the Globe and Mail, Maclean's, and Elm Street magazine

“A letter,” wrote Emily Dickinson, “always seemed to me like immortality.” Letters " personal, revealing, unguarded " sometimes survive their authors and their recipients, preserving lives, inviting discovery, daring interpretation.

In a dark and stifling attic overflowing with old letters, pamphlets and clippings, author Merilyn Simonds made an incredible discovery: scores of flimsy sheets of paper, hastily scribbled upon -- a clandestine correspondence between a schoolgirl living in the village of Portsmouth in 1919 and a convict imprisoned in Kingston Penitentiary, who broke stone in the quarry next to her house.

A dazzling blend of historical detective work and imaginative recreation, The Convict Lover takes the reader on a haunting, unforgettable journey through the world of Canada's oldest, most notorious prison and the people who lived in its shadow.

A finalist for the Governor General's Award for Nonfiction and a national bestseller, The Convict Lover was adapted for the stage in 1997 by director Layne Coleman and dramaturge Carol Corbeil, playing to sold-out audiences at Kingston's Grand Theatre and Toronto's Theatre Pass Muraille. Featured in two CBC documentaries. Currently the inspiration for a new play-in-progress by Judith Thompson.

Published in 1996 in hardcover and paperback by Macfarlane, Walter & Ross, subsequently in paperback by McClelland & Stewart. Now available in paperback from the author. Published as an eBook in 2015 by Merilyn Simonds Publications. Designed and produced by Creative Bungalow.com.

Praise for The Convict Lover:
“A tour de force. Simonds' prose is alluring, her historical detective work is flawless…”
-- The Globe and Mail

“Simonds has that lucky combination of the journalist's eye for detail and the novelist's gift for story and character . . . if Merilyn Simonds doesn't win some major award for this book, I think we should all go on strike.”
-- Montreal Gazette

“. . . constantly compelling . . . The Convict Lover is a virtuoso performance that combines the factualness of a “true story” with the techniques of fiction. It conveys historical truth with unfailing accuracy because it is told with the vitality of imagination.”
-- The Financial Post

“The writing in The Convict Lover is consistently fine, and at times inspired . . . the book's themes are grand ones: the enduring power of words on a page, and how communication with another human being can make the unbearable bearable. For all the pain and darkness it describes, The Convict Lover is less a book about a dungeon than about letter as lifeline, which makes it a book about hope.”
-- The Ottawa Citizen

“The Convict Lover is a riveting story that reclaims an obscure segment of Canadian history. Pushing the boundaries between fiction and nonfiction, the author illuminates the experience of imprisonment . . . She also tells secrets -- a private one, about a forbidden relationship, and a larger and darker one, about Canada's penitentiaries.”
-- Queen's Quarterly

“This is a beautifully controlled story that makes speculative use of intriguing materials. Simonds provocatively pushes the genre to its limits.”
-- Jury citation, 1996 Governor General Literary Awards



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