
Blithedale Canyon
Michael Bourne
(Author)Description
Product Details
Publisher | Regal House Publishing |
Publish Date | June 30, 2022 |
Pages | 292 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781646031825 |
Dimensions | 8.4 X 5.3 X 0.8 inches | 0.9 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"A vivid portrait of Northern California at the turn of the 21st century ... A story of love, addiction, regret, and hope. I couldn't put it down." --Edan Lupecki, author of California and Woman No. 17
"Blithedale Canyon is a hard look at the destruction of American capitalism in the lives of the privileged and the devoured. No one here is easy to love, and yet Bourne writes each of his damaged, difficult characters with a clear-eyed complexity that readers will recognize. By the last page, readers will be asking an essential question of our American moment: Can there be any redemption without honesty?" --Kirsten Sundberg Lunstrum, author of What We Do With the Wreckage and This Life She's Chosen
"Michael Bourne's debut novel is an ode to the pleasures and pains of the return to the familiar, to the gravitational pulls of addiction, old friends, and Springsteen on a car stereo, but mostly of home. Blithedale Canyon is a tenderly nostalgic and page-turning portrait of a man who can't control his worst impulses, written by an author in full command of his own tools." --Teddy Wayne, author of The Love Song of Jonny Valentine and Loner
"Trent Wolfer is a screwup, but one so smart and observant and oddly self-aware that we can't help rooting for him - and noting the ways in which we're a little like him. Trent wants more than anything to find some truth amid his own and others' bullshit, and we're kept on edge as he keeps losing and finding and losing that truth again. The perfect story for our age of con artists and systemic scams." --Pamela Erens, author of Eleven Hours and The Virgins
"We are surrounded by stories about winning, but where are all the great modern novels about failure? Blithedale Canyon is about Trent Wolfer who has lost almost everything. He moves back home to start fresh and quickly finds himself at risk of losing it all again. Bourne is brave enough to be honest and honest enough to write an unvarnished truth. This novel brims with humor, it's cathartic, original, and lonely. It's a wild ride." --Claire Cameron, author of The Last Neanderthal and The Bear, a #1 Canadian bestseller
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