Publisher's Hardcover ©2020 | -- |
The mundane and the extraordinary converge in this novel of one Montana woman's life.Neither Loskutoff's novel nor the character who inspires its title is easy to summarize. To say that this book covers several decades in the life of its protagonist and tracks her shifting bonds with her father and some of the other residents of a rural Montana town would be accurate. That description wouldn't get at the mysteries that this book contains, nor would it properly encapsulate the memorable contradictions held by Ruthie herself. The early pages introduce Ruthie as a child, raised by her father. At the age of 5, she sees a bizarre creature in a nearby canyon. "A tall feathered thing, it lurched toward the creek on two long, spindly, double-jointed legs." Even more alarming is the fact that it lacks a head. This intrusion of the uncanny into an otherwise realistic novel is the first indication that Loskutoff is willing to take this narrative into unexpected places. A number of other scenes, though more overtly realistic, offer a similarly dizzying experience. One, in which a high schoolâaged Ruthie is caught in a violent incident, is harrowing for its suddenness. Omens and dreams punctuate the novel, including a particularly vivid dream involving moss and dead skin. An early reference to "her short life" hints at something terrible to come for Ruthie-but the arc of this novel is anything but predictable. Its conclusion represents a bold and potentially divisive decision on Loskutoff's part-but ultimately a powerful and evocative one that casts a number of earlier scenes in sharp relief.With resonant characters and a great sense of place, this novel rarely goes where you'd expect, and is stronger for it.
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)The mundane and the extraordinary converge in this novel of one Montana woman's life.Neither Loskutoff's novel nor the character who inspires its title is easy to summarize. To say that this book covers several decades in the life of its protagonist and tracks her shifting bonds with her father and some of the other residents of a rural Montana town would be accurate. That description wouldn't get at the mysteries that this book contains, nor would it properly encapsulate the memorable contradictions held by Ruthie herself. The early pages introduce Ruthie as a child, raised by her father. At the age of 5, she sees a bizarre creature in a nearby canyon. "A tall feathered thing, it lurched toward the creek on two long, spindly, double-jointed legs." Even more alarming is the fact that it lacks a head. This intrusion of the uncanny into an otherwise realistic novel is the first indication that Loskutoff is willing to take this narrative into unexpected places. A number of other scenes, though more overtly realistic, offer a similarly dizzying experience. One, in which a high schoolâaged Ruthie is caught in a violent incident, is harrowing for its suddenness. Omens and dreams punctuate the novel, including a particularly vivid dream involving moss and dead skin. An early reference to "her short life" hints at something terrible to come for Ruthie-but the arc of this novel is anything but predictable. Its conclusion represents a bold and potentially divisive decision on Loskutoff's part-but ultimately a powerful and evocative one that casts a number of earlier scenes in sharp relief.With resonant characters and a great sense of place, this novel rarely goes where you'd expect, and is stronger for it.
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Loskutoff-s superb debut novel (after the collection
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Winner of the 2021 High Plains Book Award in Fiction In this haunting parable of the American West, a young woman faces the violent past of her remote Montana valley. As a child in Montana's Bitterroot Valley, Ruthie Fear sees an apparition: a strange, headless creature near a canyon creek. Its presence haunts her throughout her youth. Raised in a trailer by her stubborn, bowhunting father, Ruthie develops a powerful connection with the natural world but struggles to find her place in a society shaped by men. Development, gun violence, and her father's vendettas threaten her mountain home. As she comes of age, her small community begins to fracture in the face of class tension and encroaching natural disaster, and the creature she saw long ago reappears as a portent of the valley's final reckoning. An entirely new kind of western and the first novel from one of this generation's most wildly imaginative writers, Ruthie Fear captures the destruction and rebirth of the modern American West with warmth, urgency, and grandeur. The Technicolor bursts of action that test Ruthie's commitment to the valley and its people invite us to look closer at our nation's complicated legacy of manifest destiny, mass shootings, and environmental destruction. Anchored by its unforgettable heroine, Ruthie Fear presents the rural West as a place balanced on a knife-edge, at war with itself, but still unbearably beautiful and full of love.