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Three Keys

A Novel

ebook
0 of 2 copies available
0 of 2 copies available
Newly widowed and unemployed, a woman in her mid-fifties sets off on a journey of trespassing and adventure through the American West and beyond in Three Keys, a witty, thought-provoking novel from the PEN USA Award–winning writer.
“Filled with award-winner Pritchett’s electric prose and love of the natural world, Three Keys is irresistible.”—Caroline Leavitt, New York Times bestselling author of Days of Wonder1
Becoming invisible is painful . . . unless you know how to work it.
Ammalie Brinks has just lost the three keys of her life’s purpose—her husband, her job, and her role as a mom, after her son went off to college. She’s also mystified to find herself in middle age: How exactly had that happened? The terrifying idea of becoming irrelevant, invisible, of letting her life slip away Into obscurity, has her driving distracted through Nebraska with a broken plastic fork in her tangled hair.
But what Ammalie has found are three literal keys, saved in a drawer for years, from her and her husband’s past. They are the keys to homes that she hopes will be empty—and plans on spending time in. Embarking on an international and increasingly complicated journey (criminal behavior turns out to be challenging!), she seeks to find a life truly her own. And that middle-age business? As someone breaking the law, Ammalie finds there's a real benefit to being invisible when you’re working on becoming the striking, bold, and very much manifested self you want to be.
Laura Pritchett, winner of the PEN USA Award for Fiction and the Colorado Book Award, offers a delightful exploration of the very serious business of living a full and honest life. Filled with love, heartbreak, and misdemeanors, Three Keys tackles the unavoidable sorrows and joys experienced during a second coming of age with the zest and vigor that it deserves.
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    • Kirkus

      June 15, 2024
      A woman in her mid-50s embarks on a solo adventure and finds herself in the process. When Ammalie Brinks' husband, Vincent, died, they had only recently become empty nesters. This new loss was too soon, and Ammalie worries that if she had acted faster when he had the stroke, if she had known what to do, perhaps he wouldn't have died. Instead, she's been left on her own. Her son, Powell, has asked for space while he processes his father's death; her closest friend, Mari, is confronting marriage troubles; and her sister, Apricot, is struggling with her health. With no one holding her back, Ammalie sets off on her own, telling no one where exactly she's going. She begins a journey to visit three specific locations, many thousands of miles apart, using old keys to gain entry. To reach these places--one she visited with Vincent and two he visited without her--she sleeps in her car, eats canned goods from the container, and often forgoes indoor plumbing. She hopes the trip will reveal more to her about Vincent, but as she runs into challenges, the person she ends up learning about is herself. Told in a close third person, the book follows Ammalie as she meets exciting people as well as wobbles off-kilter from too much time alone, talking to her belongings and failing to adequately care for her physical needs. The author deftly depicts the escalating loneliness and fear Ammalie feels as hours on her own accumulate. Because of the solo nature of her journey, a large chunk of the book takes place inside Ammalie's head, which does slow things down. Even so, the author's nuanced descriptions of Ammalie's determination, joy, and trepidation as she meets people, as well as the lessons she takes away from each of the encounters, are engaging enough to get you through the slower portions. The book examines weighty topics like grief, marriage struggles, and growing older in a manner that is thought-provoking and insightful. A satisfying examination of one woman's journey of self-discovery.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      July 1, 2024
      Ammalie has suffered a string of losses: the death of her husband, Vincent; the loss of her job; and the estrangement from her teenage son. In their collective wake, Ammalie runs to escape the pain as well as to seek its relief. Her roving has specific touchstones: a cabin in Colorado she had once visited with Vincent, a remote camper in Arizona, and an artist's retreat in New Zealand that had been his alone. She travels solo, sleeping rough in her car and then, at each destination, gaining entry to a vacant structure that could be reclaimed at any moment. Along with the underlying danger of actual discovery, however, there's the companion thrill of self-discovery, as she puts it, "to feel secure that one was living a full life, one with a seriousness of purpose and with some fun to boot." A dedicated environmentalist and acclaimed nature writer, Pritchett's (Playing with Wildfire, 2024) keen observations of the world unfolding at Ammalie's feet are wondrous and lyrical, grounding her heroine's journey in beauty and grace.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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