Lions
A Novel
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
May 9, 2016
Nadzam’s (Lamb) somber and memorable novel is a tale of a small, dying American town, a victim of economic despair, bad weather, and population apathy. Lions, Colo., is an arid high-plains farming community with barely a pulse. It’s 2013 and most businesses and farms are gone, along with most of the people. Those who remain, including the Walker family, see their lives circling the drain. Teenager Gordon Walker and his girlfriend, Leigh Ransom, plan a happy future together anywhere but in Lions. When a stranger walks into town, their future evaporates, and a series of strange disasters befalls the town. Lions’s population is 117, but it won’t take long for that number to shrink drastically; residents can’t even drink the water. Meanwhile, with his father on his deathbed, Gordon is asked to perform a peculiar task that will forever change the boy’s life. Gordon becomes more and more withdrawn and morose, and Leigh worries they will never leave Lions. Nadzam weaves a strange and mesmerizing story, and by the end, the community of Lions reaches mythic status. Agent: Kate Johnson, Wolf Literary.
May 1, 2016
A Colorado town on its last legs tries to keep itself together. But what's a young couple got to look forward to in a near ghost town? The second novel by Nadzam (Lamb, 2011) is set in the eastern Colorado town of Lions, population 117, which hasn't been living up to its fearsome name. The sugar-beet factory has long been shuttered, and the major remaining businesses are a sleepy bar, a diner that relies on travelers from the nearby highway, and a metalworking shop that survives on odd jobs. The sole intrigue is the arrival of an unnamed stranger--and when he's later found dead in the town's water tower, many take it as a hint to pick up sticks. That group includes Leigh, the 17-year-old daughter of the diner's owner, who's eager to move on and go to college; her boyfriend, Gordon, the son of the metal-shop owner, is inclined to join her, especially once his father dies suddenly. Nadzam's novel is low on plot but high on atmosphere, and she excels at capturing the ways the town's landscape practically cries out in desperation: the shuttered train station "ate all the sleet and rain and sun and wind, and seemed when you passed by to want to suck you in, as well." And it's rich in lore about old settlers, often with tragic ends, like the schoolteacher who left 19 students to die in a blizzard. But that mood-making feels like inadequate cover for the lack of depth in the novel's core story about Leigh and Gordon. Gordon has lengthy disappearances that leave the locals only lightly troubled and reveal little about the young man's character. Nadzam aims to suggest that a barren community cultivates a certain ghostliness in its citizens. But the story itself is a touch too diaphanous. A moody if overly airy slice of small-town life.
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February 15, 2016
Winner of the Flaherty-Dunnan First Novel Prize, Nadzam's Lamb focused on an uneasy relationship between two troubled souls. This second work opens up to capture an entire town: Lions, CO, built on dreams of a glorious future but now a desolate, wind-swept bust. When his father dies, Gordon must decide whether to leave for college as planned or loyally stay behind to tend the family business.
Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
June 1, 2016
On the unforgiving plains of Colorado, the town of Lions is barely eking out an existence. The fields are barren, the stores have closed, and the shuttered factory is just a hangout for Gordon Walker and his girlfriend, Leigh, in their last summer before college. But before fall arrives, a stranger and his dog wander through. They are fed and welcomed by the Walker family but get a cooler reception at the town's only bar. One misunderstanding later, and the town will never be the same. Rumors, accusations, and the hottest summer yet cause an exodus from the already dwindling Lions. When his father dies suddenly, Gordon is faced with a difficult decision: follow Leigh to college or stay to take care of his mother and the mysterious chore the Walker men have been responsible for generation after generation. Nadzam's (Lamb, 2011) knack for powerful storytelling establishes the mystery of this dying town as a truly American fairy tale, while her unforgettable characters elevate the legend to an introspective meditation on love, loyalty, and ambition.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)
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