Appraisals
A Novel
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected Aug 4, 2026
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- $14.99
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- Pre-Order
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
Financial and ecological realities tear at the heart of a multigenerational farm family in this debut novel from a “deft and daring” (Los Angeles Times) Whiting Award winner.
Maggie Brandt, a third-generation farmer, is cultivating a few acres of organic vegetables in rural Colorado—a place where industrial farming reigns supreme—when the Great Recession hits. After months of unemployment, her husband, Fish, takes a job with an oil and gas company, a decision that threatens their once happy marriage and alienates their teenage daughter, Ozzie, a budding environmental crusader. As the wider community organizes against a billionaire outsider who is buying farmland and, more worryingly, water rights in the moisture-starved county, Maggie’s grandmother Flora grapples with the painful echoes of her own past. Flora and Ozzie’s already close bond deepens as they join a local activist group, but Fish and Maggie’s conflicting approaches to surviving circumstances that are out of their control drive them further apart. Faced with intolerable layers of loss, each member of the family is forced to consider what they are willing to compromise and what they are, or are not, able to forgive.
At once tender and urgent, Appraisals is a moving portrayal of ecological and financial catastrophe, the powerful generational bonds between women, and the fierce impulse to protect the places we love.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Boyles continues to explore the contemporary American West, as she did in her story collection, Site Fidelity, with this fertile debut novel about the joys and the challenges of farming during the Great Recession. A prologue set in 1992 introduces recent widow Flora Brandt and her teenage daughter Maggie, desperately trying to hold on to their small farm in rural Colorado. The story then jumps to 2008, with Flora; Maggie; Maggie's husband, Fish; and the couple's teenage daughter, Ozzie. The farm is again endangered, this time by the recession and a proposed petroleum pipeline. The narrative toggles between the perspectives of Maggie, Flora, and Maggie's earnest husband, Fish, who takes a job with the oil and gas company behind the pipeline project, exacerbating a fracture in his marriage and leading him to wonder if he's the one who's changed. The pipeline plot feels a bit contrived, and readers will wonder why a novel built on the relationships between its women characters doesn't include Ozzie's perspective. Still, Boyles shines in her studied descriptions of agricultural life, and her depictions of the 2008 recession dovetail with the current farm crisis. Readers will find much to admire.