Butter Road

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A01=Jaclyn Gilbert
academia
adolescent
Amish
Author_Jaclyn Gilbert
Category=FBA
Category=FQ
Category=FW
disability
eq_bestseller
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_modern-contemporary
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_philosophy-religion
family
forgiveness
forthcoming
glutaric
grief
gun
loss
mass
murder
Nickel Mines
Pennsylvania
religion
religious
Rumspringa
school
shoot
shooting
tragedy
trauma
violence
youth

Product details

  • ISBN 9781968209063
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Oct 2026
  • Publisher: Acre Books
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A searing novel about a community irrevocably transformed by gun violence.

In 2006, a gunman entered a one-room Amish schoolhouse in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, taking the students hostage and shooting ten girls before turning his weapon on himself. Set twelve years after this event, largely in the village of Nickel Mines, Butter Road explores the long-reaching ramifications of tragedy through the imagined lives of three women: Emma Walsh, an eighteen-year-old survivor of the shooting; her mother, Ruth, who lost her eldest daughter to the violence; and Sara Caldwell, an “English” outsider and wife of a doctor researching genetic disorders in the Amish population. 

At the novel's outset, Sara enlists young Emma for housework and gardening to help the Walshes alleviate the debt they’ve accumulated caring for Emma’s disabled brother, who has the rare condition Sara’s husband is studying. Over the course of several months, Sara and Emma form a bond, and as Emma explores Sara's library, she begins writing fragments of memory on the backs of old feed calendars—a process that leads her to grapple with the devastating deaths of her sister and friends, and the insularity of Amish forgiveness. The more Emma writes, the more she questions her upbringing and ingrained beliefs, ultimately seeing her relationship to Isaac Ames, the man she is destined to marry, in a new light. The story culminates with the characters making breathtaking, self-searching decisions that alter the lives of others as well as their own. 

Emotionally acute and lyrically spare, Butter Road centers on living with what we can’t control, on understanding trauma and collective grief, and on following one’s heart.

Jaclyn Gilbert grew up running in the Amish countryside of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. She is the author of the novel Late Air, and her short stories, essays, and reviews have appeared in Post Road, Tin House, Literary Hub, Long Reads, and elsewhere. She has held fellowships from the Vermont Studio Center and the Byrdcliffe Guild in Woodstock, NY. In 2021, she founded Driftless Literary, a boutique literary agency committed to representing genre-defying literature in the US and abroad.

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