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The wind blows in sleeping grass / Katie Powner.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Minneapolis, Minnesota : Bethany House, a division of Baker Publishing Group, [2023]Description: 363 pages ; 22 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780764242007
  • 0764242008
  • 9780764242250
  • 0764242253
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 813/.6 23/eng/20230410
Summary: "Pete is content in his simple life in a remote Montana town, but elderly widow Wilma is busy meddling in Pete's life to make up for past wrongs. When the sister Pete was separated from as a child shows up, Pete must confront a difficult past, and Wilma discovers her long-awaited chance at redemption may come at too high a price"-- Provided by publisher.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number URL Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book Book Bedford Public Library New Inspirational Fiction Fiction F POW More online. Available 32500005564860
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

After years of drifting, fifty-year-old Pete Ryman has settled down with his potbellied pig, Pearl, in the small town of Sleeping Grass--a place he never expected to see again. It's not the life he dreamed of, but there aren't many prospects for a high school dropout like him.



Elderly widow Wilma Jacobsen carries a burden of guilt over her part in events that led to Pete leaving Sleeping Grass decades ago. Now that he's back, she's been praying for the chance to make things right, but she never expected God's answer to leave her flat on her face--literally--and up to her ears in meddling.



When the younger sister Pete was separated from as a child shows up in Sleeping Grass with her eleven-year-old son, Pete is forced to face a past he buried long ago, and Wilma discovers her long-awaited chance at redemption may come at a higher cost than she's willing to pay.



Set in northern Montana along the rugged and remote Hi-Line, Katie Powner's latest interweaves poignancy and humor to present a story of friendship, forgiveness, and moving forward.

"Pete is content in his simple life in a remote Montana town, but elderly widow Wilma is busy meddling in Pete's life to make up for past wrongs. When the sister Pete was separated from as a child shows up, Pete must confront a difficult past, and Wilma discovers her long-awaited chance at redemption may come at too high a price"-- Provided by publisher.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Library Journal Review

In remote Montana, a trash collector with anger issues who likes poetry and converses mostly with his potbellied pig is an unlikely hero. But Powner (Where the Blue Sky Begins) has readers rooting for Pete the garbageman from page one. The small town of Sleeping Grass is on the Hi-Line, where the land and the people are being slowly eroded by the wind and the harsh winters. Pete grew up here, before the bottom fell out and he was shuttled through a series of foster homes; he is only back now because it was the one place willing to overlook his past mistakes and give him a living wage. He meets a cast of characters, including a debt-ridden octogenarian and a grieving Siksika man, who help heal the hurts of the past and teach him how to live, but his new friends have problems and secrets of their own. VERDICT Powner's real-life experience as a seasoned foster mother shines through in this tale of finding treasure in the people and things that others have cast aside. The secondary characters are funny, flawed, and so unusual that readers will be clamoring for more.

Publishers Weekly Review

Powner (Where the Blue Sky Begins) spins a sincere tale of childhood secrets and second chances in small-town Montana. Pete Ryman has settled into a quiet life as a garbage collector in Sleeping Grass, where he'd lived as a child, after an anger problem cost him a string of jobs and forced him to hop from town to town. Now, he spends his free time reciting Thoreau and Robert Frost and caring for his "sweet-tempered swine," a 79-pound pig named Pearl. What he doesn't know is that Wilma Jacobsen, the 82-year-old widow on his garbage collection route, harbors a secret about his childhood, which was spent bouncing between foster homes after his mother left when Pete was 11. One evening, Pete notices Wilma's trash can hasn't been set out and ventures into her house to find her on the floor after a fall. He helps her up, and after she invites him over for dinner to thank him, the two slowly begin to bond, though things get complicated when Pete falls for Wilma's housekeeper, Lily. After Pete's sister and nephew arrive in town, further jogging Wilma's memories of the Ryman children's volatile upbringing, she's no longer able to contain her guilt about the past. Powner's well-drawn characters will charm readers from page one, and the meditations on the power of faith, forgiveness, and hope form a strong emotional undercurrent that lends the narrative depth and momentum. This tender story and its unassuming hero enchant. (Sept.)

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Katie Powner is an award-winning author who lives in rural Montana, where cows still outnumber people. She writes contemporary fiction about redemption, relationships, and finding the dirt road home. She's a mom to the third power (biological, adoptive, and foster) who loves red shoes, Jesus, and candy--not necessarily in that order. Learn more at katiepowner.com.
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