Pale Harvest
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- 8,99 €
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- 8,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
15 BYTES BOOK AWARD WINNER
"A deeply moving and intellectually profound novel built on the iconic myth of the American West."
—KIRKUS REVIEWS, starred review
Jack Selvedge works a dying trade in a dead town. When Rebekah Rainsford returns on the run from her father, her dark history consumes him, and she becomes the potential for his salvation, the only thing that might dredge him up from his crisis of indifference. As betrayal and tragedy change Jack's life forever, he discovers a new if nascent hope amid the harshly beautiful western landscape that shaped him. A deeply written and deeply felt story of love, depravity, and shattered ideals, Pale Harvest examines the loss of beauty, purity, and simplicity within the mindset of the rural American West.
BRADEN HEPNER graduated from the Iowa Writers' Workshop in 2009 and now lives in Idaho with his wife and son. Pale Harvest is his first novel.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Hepner's stunning debut novel is an homage to the barren landscape of the American West. Ever since he was a small boy sitting on his grandfather's lap in the tractor, Jack Selvedge has toiled on the land in Juniper Scrag. Now, at the age of 20, his life revolves around the same struggling dairy farm in his Utah hometown, which is now a shell of its former self. It is unforgiving work, the cows need constant attention, and there is never enough money to replace the worn-out equipment. Though "his blood cried for the fieldwork he did," Jack feels the need for something more. When Rebekah Rainsford returns to town after a long absence, she restores Jack's lease on life. He is drawn to her beauty; she inspires him to consider the future as something he can control. From the beginning, however, their relationship is complicated by a turbulent past about which she is unwilling to speak. As Jack's feelings intensify, a series of tragedies occur in the vortex of their desire, requiring the couple to consider a future vastly different from what they had imagined. Hepner's gorgeous prose evokes the austerity and lonely beauty of the landscape. The novel is a meditation on the nature of hope and self-determination, a sweeping elegy to a dying town and to the bond between blood and earth.