From Kirkus Reviews
Antieau's amorphous debut, having no truck with orthodox novelistic ambitions, takes the form of an extended feminist polemic. Keelie, still healing and unable to talk yet, awakens to the realization that she's a composite of three distinct individuals, surgically fused together. Her head once belonged to drowned Anna, her body is that of poor murdered Bella, while her dancer's legs derive from suicide Lee. Keelie has been created by Victor to be his lover, and she's attended by timid medic Griffin, psychiatrist Hart, and Lilith, Victor's deformed wife. All of these people, as the young woman's experiences unfold, are shown to be related by blood or marriage, through space and time. Indeed, Keelie relives something of the miserable lives and sad deaths of the women whose hybrid she is. But before long she's seized by the death-goddess, Eriskegal, and commanded to remember everything. Soon Keelie recalls a time in the South American rain forests around the advent of Columbus, where she and the others live in idyllic circumstances--until a ship bringing Victor's brutal and domineering father arrives to kill or enslave them all. Later, in a prehistorical matriarchy beset by vicious patriarchal invaders, Keelie must persuade her warrior lover, Victor, to reject his father and his horrific conquests. Finally, as she remembers all the reincarnations of her composites, Keelie becomes Eriskegal. A powerful and impressive statement, with lots of complicated scenarios, relationships, and symbols, though descriptive rather than prescriptive. -- Copyright ©1996, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Book Description
From ancient battles and violent witch-hunts to Amazonian paradise and Sumerian hell, Keelie spirals through epic distortions of history and magic. She finds that her very salvation may depend not on the promise of the futureÂbut on the lessons learned in the past.
About the Author
Kim Antieau lives in the Pacific Northwest, along with Bigfoot, coyotes, bears, salmon, snakes, cougars, and her husband, poet Mario Milosevic.
The Jigsaw Woman ANNOTATION
In this extraordinary journey of self-discovery, Keelie, created from the bodies of three women, is guided through history and magic by the tempestuous goddess Eriskegal. Steeped in mythology, Keelie's struggle to recall the powerful spirit of womanhood is a dynamic new fable.
FROM THE PUBLISHER
From ancient battles and violent witch-hunts to Amazonian paradise and Sumerian hell, Keelie spirals through epic distortions of history and magic. She finds that her very salvation may depend not on the promise of the future but on the lessons learned in the past.
SYNOPSIS
Brilliant....One of the best writers we have today.
Charles de Lint, author of Memory and Dream
FROM THE CRITICS
Kirkus Reviews
Antieau's amorphous debut, having no truck with orthodox novelistic ambitions, takes the form of an extended feminist polemic. Keelie, still healing and unable to talk yet, awakens to the realization that she's a composite of three distinct individuals, surgically fused together. Her head once belonged to drowned Anna, her body is that of poor murdered Bella, while her dancer's legs derive from suicide Lee. Keelie has been created by Victor to be his lover, and she's attended by timid medic Griffin, psychiatrist Hart, and Lilith, Victor's deformed wife. All of these people, as the young woman's experiences unfold, are shown to be related by blood or marriage, through space and time. Indeed, Keelie relives something of the miserable lives and sad deaths of the women whose hybrid she is. But before long she's seized by the death-goddess, Eriskegal, and commanded to remember everything. Soon Keelie recalls a time in the South American rain forests around the advent of Columbus, where she and the others live in idyllic circumstancesuntil a ship bringing Victor's brutal and domineering father arrives to kill or enslave them all. Later, in a prehistorical matriarchy beset by vicious patriarchal invaders, Keelie must persuade her warrior lover, Victor, to reject his father and his horrific conquests. Finally, as she remembers all the reincarnations of her composites, Keelie becomes Eriskegal.
A powerful and impressive statement, with lots of complicated scenarios, relationships, and symbols, though descriptive rather than prescriptive.
WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING
A marvel, a fabulous trip...exciting, poignant, frightening and transcendant. Kate Wilhelm
Brilliant...one of the best writers we have today. Charles De Lint