Sinking Bell
Stories
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3.0 • 1 Rating
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
* 2023 SOUTHWEST BOOK AWARD WINNER *
Potent stories that offer a forceful vision of contemporary Navajo life, by an American Book Award winner
An ex-con hired to fix up a school bus for a couple living off the grid in the desert finds himself in the middle of their tattered relationship. An electrician’s plan to take his young nephew on a hike in the mountains, as a break from the motel room where they live, goes awry thanks to an untrustworthy new coworker. A night custodian makes the mistake of revealing too much about his work at a medical research facility to a girl who shares his passion for death metal. A relapsing addict struggles to square his desire for a white woman he meets in a writing class with family expectations and traditions.
Set in and around Flagstaff, the stories in Sinking Bell depict violent collisions of love, cultures, and racism. In his gritty and searching fiction debut, Bojan Louis draws empathetic portraits of day laborers, metalheads, motel managers, aspiring writers and musicians, construction workers, people passing through with the hope of something better somewhere else. His characters strain to temper predatory or self-destructive impulses; they raise families, choose families, and abandon families; they endeavor to end cycles of abuse and remake themselves anew.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The characters in Louis's lyrical debut collection (after the poetry volume Currents) aspire for something more than the drudgery of their low-paying jobs. In "As Meaningless as the Origin," the unnamed narrator, a Navajo construction worker, overcomes a handful of obstacles on his way to taking off for a new life in Sitka, Alaska. In "Silence," protagonist Katie, a cleaner, books a trip to Mexico City for her and her husband, a struggling musician with family in Oaxaca, hoping to help him and their marriage. "Trickster Myths" tracks the awkward but sexually charged relationship between an aspiring Navajo writer and Bella, a white girl who dances in a strip club and meets him in a writing workshop. Other stories follow an unsteady excursion to a legendary cave, a Navajo grandmother sharing an ancestral story with her family, and a young custodian at an animal testing site desperate to lose his virginity. Louis's prose carries his poetic sensibility with a decided rhythm and resonant detail, and the narrators achingly convey their outsider status. The result is immersive and powerful.