Sherwood Nation

Available

Product Details

Price
$16.00  $14.88
Publisher
Small Beer Press
Publish Date
Pages
400
Dimensions
5.5 X 8.4 X 1.1 inches | 1.1 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781618730862

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About the Author

Benjamin Parzybok is the author of the novel Couch, and has been the creator/co-creator of many other projects, including Gumball Poetry (literary journal published in capsule machines), The Black Magic Insurance Agency (city-wide, one night alternate reality game), and Project Hamad (an effort to free a Guantanamo inmate and shed light on Habeas Corpus). He lives in Portland with the artist Laura Moulton and their two kids. He can be found online at levinofearth.com.

Reviews

"Set in Portland Oregon after a massive drought has crippled American society west of the Mississippi, Sherwood Nation is a different kind of dystopian novel. No magic. No zombies. No tyrannical overlords ruling with iron fists and tournaments. It brings a fascinating realism to the genre, creating a uniquely human and tangible version of the apocalypse story. Sherwood Nation is about real people grappling with an all too real catastrophe in ways that reveal aspects of our culture today, while exploring the best, worst, and, most importantly, the vague middle between the two ideals, of what we could be."-- Josh Cook, Porter Square Books

"Parzybok's achievements are manifold here. First, he tells a gripping story whose lineaments are never predictable. There are great suspenseful set pieces, like the theft of a water truck and a shootout in Sherwood. The entire action is compressed into about two weeks or so, but feels like a whole saga: birth, maturity, and death of a kingdom."
-- Locus

"A group of idealists, led by a charismatic young woman, struggle to remake society in postapocalyptic Portland, Ore."
-- Shelf Awareness

"Sherwood Nation has left me with memorable images that will, no doubt, be triggered over time. There's something heavy real in its imaginings--something that almost compels me to pray for rain."
-- NW Book Lovers

"With climate change and ever-increasing consumption, running out of water is a danger we don't readily acknowledge, yet Benjamin Parzybok's Sherwood Nation makes that danger vividly real. . . . Here we see how people behave in crisis--some better and some worse--and how idealism, self-concerned realism, and the personal hang in a balance; friends, alliances, and enemies are made, and, most effectively, Renee's boyfriend, Zach, and Renee herself grow (and glow) as things get tough. Ben, who's Portland-based, is the creator or co-creator of numerous projects, including Gumball Poetry and the Black Magic Insurance Agency, a city-wide, one night alternate reality game, so he knows about building community. He's done a great job here, but let's hope the richly detailed "Sherwood Nation" never really has to come to be."
-- Library Journal

"Parzybok is riffing on the Robin Hood story, to be sure, but he also layers on some astute social and political commentary, and he's built a fully functioning and believable future world. Give this one to fans of Adam Sternbergh's Shovel Ready (2014)."
--Booklist

"Benjamin Parzybok is one of our most imaginative literary inventors. In Sherwood Nation he gives us a vision of Portland's rebellious indie spirit that goes deeper than the usual caricatures, revealing a city alive with conflict and possibility. This is playful, serious, and profoundly humanizing art." -- Ryan Boudinot (Blueprints of the Afterlife)

"Portland is a rare outpost, with a semi-functional municipality, but the burdens of relentless rationing and an increasingly apparent division between those who go thirsty and those who do not, make for prime tinder. It takes just one minor act of symbolic monkey wrenching to set this tale ablaze.
"Couch has remained in my consciousness because it goes "out there" to find its core (think Douglas Adams, Tom Robbins, Gabriel Garcia Marquez). What makes Sherwood so compelling and, frankly, often terrifying, is how close to home it lives.
"This Portland is totally familiar, invoking the attitudes and spirit of today's residents and details from the recent political landscape. It feels like the place we know -- until a nightly power blackout or parade of National Guard water distribution tankers jars us with a reminder that this is, thankfully, a work of very good fiction."
-- Register Guard

"Benjamin Parzybok has reached into the post-collapse era for a story vital to our here and now. Sherwood Nation is part political thriller, part social fable, and part manifesto, its every page brimming with gonzo exuberance."--Jedediah Berry (The Manual of Detection)