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Come West and See: Stories
by Maxim Loskutoff
Hardcover : 240 pages
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This searing debut reimagines the American West through linked stories describing a violent rural separatist movement.
In an isolated region of Idaho, Montana, and eastern Oregon known as the Redoubt, an armed occupation of a wildlife refuge is escalating into civil war. Against this ...
Introduction
This searing debut reimagines the American West through linked stories describing a violent rural separatist movement.
In an isolated region of Idaho, Montana, and eastern Oregon known as the Redoubt, an armed occupation of a wildlife refuge is escalating into civil war. Against this backdrop, twelve stories of ordinary lives explore the loneliness, fragility, and heartbreak inherent to love. Families feel the far-reaching shockwaves of displacement and division. A mother makes a hard choice for her sons when their father goes to lead a standoff with the federal government. An unemployed carpenter joins a militia after his wife leaves him and the first airstrikes raze the streets of his hometown. A former soldier raises the daughter of a dead comrade in a bunker beneath an abandoned farm.
Ranging from the cities to the small towns of the West, and imbued with its own brand of radical empathy, Loskutoff's fiction is both timely and timeless. Come West and See surges with rage, longing, and fear, and offers startling insights into the wounds of the American people.
Editorial Review
An Amazon Best Book of May 2018: In "The Dancing Bear," the first story of Maxim Loskutoff's debut short story collection, Come West and See, a lonesome frontiersman falls hard for a grizzly that happens upon his Montana cabin. It’s weird: Her fur shimmered and rolled in waves, like the windy prairie where I was born. Her pink tongue swept away stray apple chunks from around her mouth. I wondered if she had lips. As many tales of unrequited love go, especially in the boy-meets-bear genre, his passion cannot span the species gap, inexorably leading to misunderstanding and calamity. It's a funny story (if you have the right ear) and a solid hook, but from there Loskutoff drives the car back onto the highway to the world of human interaction, examining the complexities of a changing American West through a series of vignettes set in the imaginary "Redoubt": A cross-section of Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming that's home to a separatist movement grown out of the occupation of a wildlife sanctuary. (If that sounds familiar, it's because a version of that happened.) But throughout the dozen stories, the simmering revolution largely stays (for the most part) in the background. Loskutoff's interest lies with the people of this vision of Sagebrush Rebellion—the disenfranchised, resentful, and angry prepared to defend their "way of life" against the encroachments of changing demographics, environmentalism, and globalism. His characters hum with anxiety, each overstrung by the knowledge that disaster could visit at any moment, that their own actions have led them down a foolish and futile path—even if they would choose it again. That's just what happens when you court a bear. --Jon Foro, Amazon Book ReviewDiscussion Questions
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