Whiskey When We're Dry
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Narrated by:
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Sophie Amoss
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By:
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John Larison
"A thunderclap of originality, here is a fresh voice and fresh take on one of the oldest stories we tell about ourselves as Americans and Westerners. It's riveting in all the right ways -- a damn good read that stayed with me long after closing the covers." - Timothy Egan, New York Times bestselling author of The Worst Hard Time
From a blazing new voice in fiction, a gritty and lyrical American epic about a young woman who disguises herself as a boy and heads west
In the spring of 1885, seventeen-year-old Jessilyn Harney finds herself orphaned and alone on her family's homestead. Desperate to fend off starvation and predatory neighbors, she cuts off her hair, binds her chest, saddles her beloved mare, and sets off across the mountains to find her outlaw brother Noah and bring him home. A talented sharpshooter herself, Jess's quest lands her in the employ of the territory's violent, capricious Governor, whose militia is also hunting Noah--dead or alive.
Wrestling with her brother's outlaw identity, and haunted by questions about her own, Jess must outmaneuver those who underestimate her, ultimately rising to become a hero in her own right.
Told in Jess's wholly original and unforgettable voice, Whiskey When We're Dry is a stunning achievement, an epic as expansive as America itself--and a reckoning with the myths that are entwined with our history.
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“This life is cut with trails unrode. There was a time I resented that fact, the cruelty of being stuck to only one. But age like I got teaches you to be grateful for those trails untook. The old mind can wander their lengths and see what the eyes was never allowed, what the eyes would have missed. I’ve had time to wander those trails that interest me.”
Oftentimes when I read a book, I have a pretty clear memory of when I picked it out or who recommeconded it. I have no such memory with Whiskey When We’re Dry. My reasons for reading it are about as nebulous. A ‘book-tac-toe’ challenge would be completed by a book with a yellow cover. Might as well give it a spin, right? When I started the book, I really had no idea what it was about. Whiskey I suppose. It didn’t take long for Larsion’s prose to pull me in. A few lines, delivered with folksy honesty but no less profound had me hooked from the get-go. I was fully prepared to enjoy what I assumed was going to be the tale of a family and their plot of land. The woes of fields gone fallow, and steers rustled. I don’t read a lot of western fiction, but I was ready. Then the story took a turn. Tragedies and tribulations befell the characters, all still beautifully expounded upon from Jesse’s first-person narration.
The protagonist, a young girl named Jessilyn is forced on the open road, hoping to reconnect with the remaining family she has. She conceals her gender and becomes Jesse, hoping to pass for a young man for her own safety. Salient points were made about a woman’s role in the old west, especially for a woman traveling alone. The book has a lot to say about identity. Not just in terms of gender roles but of family, faith, ancestry, and that of a young nation healing from the Civil War. After continued prairie poetry about the uncaring wilderness and the cruelty of man, Jesse finds that her estranged brother has become a revered outlaw and finds herself in the employ of the governor. A character from whom manifest destiny was writ large. As a counter point, her brother Noah is convinced that he has been ordained by God on high to engage in banditry against a system he perceives as corrupt. The author doesn’t shy away from the fact that both men are invoking what they perceive to be the higher power for their own ends.
So the book becomes a full fledged neo-Western. Full of gunfights, duels, and crawling into a bottle of the eponymous spirit to quiet the conscious for the blood spilled. The book does not shy away from savagery. Whiskey and blood pour over the pages in equal measure, as do the cries of the maimed and bloodied. Jesse, and her evolution of violence, is compelling. Despite the brutality being described, Larison continues to do so in the same beautiful prose he uses to describe the sun setting on the junipers and sage.
“How could you kill as you have?
The same logic lies dormant within all fairy tales and histories, it is fundamental as our origins, as urgent as our breaths. And yet I will confess the choice was ours.
The choice is always ours.”
Prairie Prose
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Don’t miss this one. And the reading in audio version is perfectly toned.
Incredible
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Wonderful!
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delivered in grit and truth...
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Main characters texture is super rich.
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