| A Review of: Bad Latitudes by W.P. KinsellaA beautiful cover of a snarling Husky by Tetro Design highlights
this female coming-of-age novel set in the Yukon. In the process
of moving from Ontario to the Yukon, 21-year-old Connie hitches a
ride toward Whitehorse, only to intervene in a domestic brawl when
her ride insists on visiting friends. She stabs Dale, the brutish
husband, not seriously, but he lets it be known that he seeks revenge
and Connie tries to escape him by moving further into the wilderness.
She becomes friends with a woman trapper named Rowan who happens
to be gay, and learns about hardscrabble living in winter in the
wilds of the Yukon. When Rowan suffers injury at the hands of the
violent Dale, the greenhorn Connie must take charge, learn how to
shoot, handle a team of Huskies (easier said than done) and survive
a long journey to save Rowan's life, while being stalked by Dale,
who outwits some particularly stupid RCMPs. The action in extremely
melodramatic on occasion, while the peripheral characters seem to
have little purpose in the narrative. Some of the questions raised
about Connie's sexuality seem contrived. The yawping yahoos of the
politically correct would have a field day with Pope writing from
the perspective of a lesbian. However, I think he generally handles
that part of the novel successfully. An enjoyable page turner.
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