Synopses & Reviews
Two women set out through the haze of social and environmental collapse in search of fertile soil. As they travel through deserts, burned-over forests, and lightless mountain caverns, they learn to navigate the terrain of their evolving connection. An invocation, an elegy, a postcard home, Alissa Hattman’s Sift is a story about family wounds, humanity’s failures, how to care for one another at the end, and how to make a new beginning.
Synopsis
An invocation, an elegy, a way to begin after the end.
Two women set out through the haze of social and environmental collapse in search of fertile soil. As they travel through deserts, burned-over forests, and lightless mountain caverns, they learn to navigate the terrain of their evolving connection. An invocation, an elegy, a postcard home, Sift is a story about family wounds, humanity's failures, how to care for one another at the end, and how to make a new beginning.
About the Author
Alissa Hattman’s writing has appeared in The Rumpus, The Gravity of the Thing, Big Other, Shirley Magazine, and elsewhere. She holds an MFA in Fiction from Pacific University and an MA in Literature from Portland State University. Originally from North Dakota, she now lives and teaches in the Pacific Northwest. Sift is her first book. More at www.alissahattman.com.