The Dig
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- $15.99
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- $15.99
Publisher Description
Life and death, animals and land, and a farmer and a stranger are all inextricably linked in this “dark, tense, and vital” award-winning novel (The Guardian). Daniel is a farmer in rural Wales who raises lambs. Another unnamed man hunts badgers and sells them to the locals. Slowly, the isolated lives of these two men spiral toward each other with a grim, inescapable logic. Written in a spare yet utterly gripping voice, Jones’s fourth novel received the Jerwood Fiction Uncovered Prize and “is brilliantly alive; a profound, powerful and utterly absorbing portrayal of a subterranean rural world” (The Guardian). As acclaimed by the Daily Telegraph, “It is a book about the essentials: life and death, cruelty and compassion. It is a book that will get in your bones, and haunt you.”
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Welsh writer Jones's brutal, lyrical, slim novel centers on two men widowed sheep farmer Daniel and an illicit badger baiter known only as the big man" living in present-day rural Wales. Spare in its plotting, the story follows both men as their paths gradually converge. While Daniel navigates the ordeals of lambing season" as the reality of his wife's death (by an accidental horse kick) settles in, the big man attempts to stave off the police while searching for the location of his next dig (badgers are captured from underground tunnels). He eventually lands on a section of Daniel's property. While the action of the story is compelling, the real pleasures lie in Jones's language and meditations on grief. In prose that calls to mind both the severity of Cormac McCarthy and the psychological lucidity of John Updike, Jones explores the intricacies of Daniel's mourning ( He seemed to know the offer of sympathy would be like a gate he'd go crashing through"), as well as the strangeness of time not a thing you live within, but... an element you grow alien to when you become aware of it." The focus on the criminal underbelly of agrarian culture poses a refreshing counterpoint to back-to-the-land idealism.