
From : The Globe and Mail
Photo : http://www.theglobeandmail.com/
Einar is, nevertheless, more than a tourist attraction or “rural oddity.”
In recent years, he has buried his wife and only child and, at 80, he is increasingly aware of his own mortality. Against his wishes, Einar’s granddaughter, Griff, has dropped out of college to care for him, while she sorts out a complicated relationship with her long-time boyfriend. As Einar is contemplating his end, Griff is searching for her beginning.
In a parallel plot, Crane, the town sheriff, finds a murdered teenager in a methamphetamine lab – one more reminder that this is not the old west of Zane Grey – and begins a strenuous search for the killer. Crane is in the early stages of a neurodegenerative disease and is struggling to catch the culprit and salvage his marriage (to Griff’s mother) while he is still able.
In a parallel plot, Crane, the town sheriff, finds a murdered teenager in a methamphetamine lab – one more reminder that this is not the old west of Zane Grey – and begins a strenuous search for the killer. Crane is in the early stages of a neurodegenerative disease and is struggling to catch the culprit and salvage his marriage (to Griff’s mother) while he is still able.

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