Description
Gaining Ground by Joan Barfoot is a literary fiction novel that explores isolation, identity, and the consequences of radical personal withdrawal from society. The story follows Abra, a woman who abandons her suburban family life, including her husband and children, to live in seclusion in an isolated cabin. Choosing a life without modern comforts or social contact, she attempts to redefine herself through solitude and self-sufficiency.
As Abra adapts to her new environment, the narrative traces her physical and psychological transformation. Removed from structured social life, she becomes attuned to natural rhythms and develops a sense of independence shaped by the demands of survival. The novel examines how isolation can both strip away and reconstruct identity over time.
Years later, Abra’s solitude is disrupted when her daughter, now an adult, seeks answers about her mother’s departure. This encounter introduces questions of responsibility, abandonment, and the long-term impact of personal choices on family relationships.
Gaining Ground is suited to readers of character-driven literary fiction who are interested in psychological depth, themes of self-reinvention, and the tension between individual freedom and familial obligation.














