Book Jacket ENDORSEMENTS FOR TWO FACES OF THE MOON by Carolyn McGrath


"What the noisy and perilous world needs now is Carolyn McGrath's fervent paean to solitude. In Two Faces of the Moon, our companions are not only the author in her beloved wilderness, but the ghosts of the remarkable women who nurtured and protected it. Their stories, along with McGrath's moving personal journey, give this memoir its distinct power and relevance."

         -- Christopher Castellani, Writer in Residence at Brandeis University and author of Leading Men.


"Carolyn McGrath tells an unusual but compelling story of her life as the owner of a small island in a Canadian lake where one summer, helped by her surroundings of outstanding natural beauty, she looked at her complex relationship with her family and worked out who she was; and where now, the great spoiling tide of the 21 st century is fast approaching. Her memoir is a beautifully-written, passionate and lyrical testament to the worth of the natural world which is everywhere so threatened."

         --Michael McCarthy, author of The Moth Snowstorm - Nature and Joy

"Two Faces of the Moon is at once an intensely personal memoir and a resonant meditation on the complex relationships between children and parents, the role of humans in nature, and the precious pleasures of solitude. Throughout, Carolyn McGrath writes with a deep and loving sense of place that leaves one wishing for their own island refuge in the wilderness."

         -- Andrea L. Smalley, author of Wild By Nature: North American Animals Confront Colonization.


"This absorbing book is a work of art, exploring natural beauty, solitude, and the mysteries of parental influence. I enjoyed it immensely."

         -- Adele Glimm, author of Gene Hunter: The Story of Neuropsychologist Nancy Wexler.


"Virginia Woolf said a woman needed a room of her own. For Carolyn McGrath, the room is her own small island on a lake in Canada where she spends summers in close company with the local wildlife. In this moving and beautifully written book, she comes to terms with her feelings for her mother, dying in a nursing home nearby, and her long-deceased father, who had come to the island to kill wildlife. She also describes the lives of 19th century pioneers who forged a living in the backwoods surrounding the lake. In an Afterword, McGrath recounts the inevitable and threatening changes coming to this once remote and isolated Eden."

         - E. A. M. Jakab, author of Louis Pasteur: Hunting Killer Germs


"Beautifully remembered story of life at the author's beloved island cottage. Of special interest to Bobs Lake residents, local history fans and anyone who cares deeply about the natural world."

         --Peri McQuay, author of A Wing in the Door: Life with a Red-Tailed Hawk.