Listen bookcover

Listen

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Description

Stripped of opportunity by the Great Depression, educated and ambitious Liam takes a low-paying job with the Federal Writers' Project, assigned to collect stories of rural life for the Library of Congress in a hot, poverty-stricken Dust Bowl town in Oklahoma. He'll take his government check, write the stories, and wait for better times. Then Liam meets a woman who upends all his plans.

Eden Sawyer may be poor, but she's hardworking and determined. She has dreams; more than that, she has talent. As Liam interviews her, he discovers that Eden longs to be an artist, and has the skill to do it, if only she can break the cycle of poverty that traps her.

Eden leads Liam to an unexpected, unimagined love. But as he interviews more townspeople, Liam's probing questions steer him into danger, threatening to reveal untold secrets, unsolved mysteries, and unfulfilled passions. Will one man's simmering jealousy and thwarted ambition bring Liam and Eden's story to an abrupt and deadly end?

Product Details

PublisherCennan Books of Cynren Press
Publish DateApril 11, 2023
Pages216
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconHardback
EAN/UPC9781947976375
Dimensions9.0 X 6.0 X 0.6 inches | 1.0 pounds

About the Author

Dr. Sheldon Russell is the author of thirteen books and is perhaps best known for his Hook Runyon mystery series. His work has twice won the Oklahoma Book Award for Fiction, as well as the Langum Prize for Historical Literature. He's received starred reviews in both Booklist and Publishers Weekly. The Insane Train was selected as one of the six best mysteries of 2010 by Publishers Weekly. A Forgotten Evil (Cynren/Cennan) won the 2020 Spur Award for Best Western Historical Novel, Western Writers of America. A Particular Madness (Cynren/Cennan) was selected as a Spur Award Finalist for Best Western Contemporary Novel of 2022.Growing up on a cattle ranch in the Gloss Mountains of Oklahoma has given Russell insight into the power of place and man's capacity for good and evil. His was a storytelling culture, a culture of humor and of hard times. A passion for narrative and history was inevitable. Russell and his wife, Nancy, a sculptor, currently reside on the home ranch in Waynoka, Oklahoma. Hobbies and interests include reading, collecting books, and gardening.

Reviews

Reminiscent of Sara Gruen's Water for Elephants, Sheldon Russell's Listen paints a picture of the resilience of people during the Great Depression. Jobs were hard to come by when Liam Walker stepped off the train in Atlas, Oklahoma. He was out of options and had to make a living. And then he met the inhabitants of the town. Working for the Federal Writers' Project, a part of Roosevelt's WPA, he listened to their stories and learned the difference between working to live and living to work. Eden, a woman with troubles of her own, had a burning talent and drive that would pull her up-if she would let it-and Liam wanted to help her. Listen is full of deep characterizations and action to keep you guessing. Five stars for Listen.

-Peggy Chambers, author of Blooming Greed

Listen is an excellent read. The character development is very well done, and the plot keeps the story moving at a swift pace. The clear, concise, and descriptive sentences make the story come alive. The references to the flora and fauna of the setting add a lot to the novel. I thoroughly enjoyed all of the characters. They were realistic to the extent that I felt as though I knew many of them. Listen is a very interesting novel that I will recommend to all of my literary friends!

-Dave Kirkbride, former Executive Director, Kansas National Education Association

In 1935, FDR established the Federal Writers' Project to hire unemployed writers during the Great Depression and record the unique experiences of ordinary Americans across the country. Sheldon Russell's latest novel, Listen, uses this ambitious government program to uncover the surprising stories of rural residents in an isolated Oklahoma town and emphasize the power that narrative can have in bringing us together. As in his other work, Russell gives voice to the beauty and mystery behind northwestern Oklahoma's harsh landscape and resilient residents.

-Matthew Lambert, PhD, Assistant Professor, Department of English, Foreign Language, and Humanities, Northwestern Oklahoma State University

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