The short story “Rootbound” explores experiences of rural life, everyday unhappiness, aging, and estrangement in all its forms. Clementine’s children are grown, moved away, and scarcely heard from, leaving her husband Morley her only company. Morley, a retired oil man, seems uninterested in reconnecting with his wife after years of camp food, shack life, and clandestine cocaine. Although Clementine can retire from her part-time job at the garden centre, she continues working to distract herself from the painful nonentity that is her marriage. Clementine’s dissatisfaction with her life constantly pulls her into the past – a place more vivid than her present, but just as complex. Often, she skis the familiar, wooded trails on her farm to tak...