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The Slow Hour
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235464445
- EAN9798235464445
- Date de parution06/05/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
Nine years ago, Wendell buried the man he loved. Since then, he has lived alone on a small orchard in northern Alabama, working the same land his father once worked before him. The days are steady. The seasons arrive on time. There is always pruning to finish, fences to mend, fruit to gather before the cold comes down from the hills. He has learned how to live with silence. Then, in the first week of September, a stranger walks up the long gravel drive.
His name is Sam Pritchard. He is thirty-five years old, quiet, capable, and carrying more history than he is willing to explain. He says he has worked orchards before. He says he only needs a place to stay through harvest season. Wendell hires him for the fall. What begins as ordinary work slowly becomes something neither man expected: shared meals after dark, muddy boots left by the back door, coffee poured into a second cup without thinking about it first.
Day by day, season by season, the orchard begins to feel less like a place to wait out the rest of a life and more like something still alive. But grief does not disappear simply because someone new arrives. As the harvest deepens and the first frost approaches, both men are forced to reckon with the lives they believed were already decided - the losses they carry, the years they spent alone, and the terrifying possibility that love may still be waiting for them long after they thought their chances had passed.
THE SLOW HOUR is a quiet literary novel about grief, tenderness, work, memory, and the strange ways people find each other when they are no longer looking to be found. Set over the course of a single autumn season, the novel unfolds at the pace of real life: mornings in the orchard before sunrise, worn flannel sleeves against cold air, the sound of apples dropping softly into baskets, an aging dog asleep between two chairs on the porch.
The intimacy in this story lives in gestures rather than declarations - in the meal saved for someone coming home late, in the hand resting briefly on rough porch boards, in the silence two people slowly learn to share. This is not a coming-out story. It is not a romance built on spectacle or crisis. THE SLOW HOUR is about two grown men carrying the weight of ordinary lives, discovering that companionship can arrive quietly and still change everything.
Written in spare, luminous prose inspired by the Southern literary tradition, the novel will resonate with readers who love intimate character-driven fiction, slow emotional storytelling, and deeply atmospheric novels rooted in place. Readers drawn to the emotional restraint of Gilead, the rural intimacy of Brokeback Mountain, and the meditative human realism of Plainsong will find a familiar emotional landscape here.
His name is Sam Pritchard. He is thirty-five years old, quiet, capable, and carrying more history than he is willing to explain. He says he has worked orchards before. He says he only needs a place to stay through harvest season. Wendell hires him for the fall. What begins as ordinary work slowly becomes something neither man expected: shared meals after dark, muddy boots left by the back door, coffee poured into a second cup without thinking about it first.
Day by day, season by season, the orchard begins to feel less like a place to wait out the rest of a life and more like something still alive. But grief does not disappear simply because someone new arrives. As the harvest deepens and the first frost approaches, both men are forced to reckon with the lives they believed were already decided - the losses they carry, the years they spent alone, and the terrifying possibility that love may still be waiting for them long after they thought their chances had passed.
THE SLOW HOUR is a quiet literary novel about grief, tenderness, work, memory, and the strange ways people find each other when they are no longer looking to be found. Set over the course of a single autumn season, the novel unfolds at the pace of real life: mornings in the orchard before sunrise, worn flannel sleeves against cold air, the sound of apples dropping softly into baskets, an aging dog asleep between two chairs on the porch.
The intimacy in this story lives in gestures rather than declarations - in the meal saved for someone coming home late, in the hand resting briefly on rough porch boards, in the silence two people slowly learn to share. This is not a coming-out story. It is not a romance built on spectacle or crisis. THE SLOW HOUR is about two grown men carrying the weight of ordinary lives, discovering that companionship can arrive quietly and still change everything.
Written in spare, luminous prose inspired by the Southern literary tradition, the novel will resonate with readers who love intimate character-driven fiction, slow emotional storytelling, and deeply atmospheric novels rooted in place. Readers drawn to the emotional restraint of Gilead, the rural intimacy of Brokeback Mountain, and the meditative human realism of Plainsong will find a familiar emotional landscape here.





















