Synopses & Reviews
"Sojourner's writing is evocative, descriptive and lyrical
29 is a tantalizing read."
THE DURANGO HERALD
"Sojourner seduces readers with shimmering visions of the West
At the same time, she forces us to face the weary but undeniable truth that we're butchering the place
Her palpable sorrow about the land permeates the novel, but it's relieved by a sense of humor and plenty of wisecracking dialogue."
HIGH COUNTRY NEWS
"Sojourner's book crackles and bristles with all of the right tones. The author lived in Twentynine Palms and in the surrounding area, witnessing directly the work of tribes to stop the spread of solarpower installations and the invisibility that many native peoples endure. Her book sings with authenticity."
THE UTAH REVIEW
"Like the leafy sea dragon that moves gracefully in and out of these pages, 29 by Mary Sojourner is equal parts real and ethereal and wholly entrancing."
FLAGSTAFF LIVE
"[Sojourner] writes herself onto the page and bares all. Her characters personify past lovers and old friends, but ever apparent is the character of place."
ARIZONA DAILY SUN
"…wry, surreal, and tender…29 reminded me that literature is an ecstatic conversation between reader and author…"
—HIGH DESERT JOURNAL
"Everascending Sojourner cooks up wrenching sorrow and hilarious banter, environmental and moral conundrums, magnetizing characters, and a place of transcendent beauty in this intoxicating, provocative, and gloriously told desert tale of wildness and community, unexpected bonds and deep legacies, trauma and healing."
DONNA SEAMAN, BOOKLIST (starred review)
"This standout ecological novel from Arizona author Sojourner features picturesque prose, a vivid western setting, and sharply drawn characters."
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY (starred review)
"Notable characters carry Sojourner's powerful story of our connection to the earth. A profoundly affecting novel."
LIBRARY JOURNAL
"In Nell Walker, Mary Sojourner has created a character who discoversin her own desperate waythe simple beauty in the interconnectedness of the natural world and the complexities we heap upon it. Written with passion and humor, 29 takes the reader on a journey of hope, humanity, and love."
JANA RICHMAN, author of Riding in the Shadows of Saints, The Last Cowgirl, and The Ordinary Truth
"29 is at the intersection of a local road to Nowhere and an interstate to Everywhere. Certainly Mary's prose and storytelling is crystalline and lovely, a kind of geode broth, filled with light and piquancy."
DAVID KRANES, author of The Legends Daughter and The National Tree
"Sojourner's desert eyes not only see but transform what others dismiss and ignore. She brings readers deep into the dust and sparkle of the Mojave, forcing the reader to hear the people of the deserttheir stories, their sorrows, and their fierce and fragile loves. 29 holds the ragged weeping desert open, then kisses closed her wounds. A love letter to what we frequently deem unloveable, 29 is a widearmed triumph of hope."
LARAINE HERRING, author of Ghost Swamp Blues and Writing Begins with the Breath
"This is a story that will stay with the readers and, perhaps, bring them home to their own place, and the importance of fighting for what you love."
SUSAN LANG, author of the Mojave novels trilogy
"The language is sharp as a butcher's blade, the dialogue rings true and hard, and the story cuts deeply into its reader."
H. LEE BARNES, author of Cold Deck, The Lucky, and Car Tag
"Sojourner's new novel, much like the desert landscapes in which it is set, will never speak to those who see the Mojave as an annoying blur between L.A. and Vegas, but those adventurous enough (or lost enough) to wander off I15 will find a world bursting with fragile beauty, tenacious life, and rock hard truth."
GILES CARWYN, author of Queen of Oblivion
Synopsis
Nell, a washed-out executive, falls into an impossible affair and a battle over sacred Native American lands in Twentynine Palms.
Synopsis
Nell Walker, an L.A. executive who believed she had everything and learns she had nothing, finds herself boarding a bus rolling away from bitter loss toward a fiercely beautiful landscape, an impossible love affair, and a fight for the earth that brings her back to a past richer than anything she could have imagined.
-Sojourner's writing is evocative, descriptive and lyrical...29 is a tantalizing read.-
--THE DURANGO HERALD
-Sojourner seduces readers with shimmering visions of the West...At the same time, she forces us to face the weary but undeniable truth that we're butchering the place...Her palpable sorrow about the land permeates the novel, but it's relieved by a sense of humor and plenty of wisecracking dialogue.-
--HIGH COUNTRY NEWS
-Sojourner's book crackles and bristles with all of the right tones. The author lived in Twentynine Palms and in the surrounding area, witnessing directly the work of tribes to stop the spread of solar-power installations and the invisibility that many native peoples endure. Her book sings with authenticity.-
--THE UTAH REVIEW
-Like the leafy sea dragon that moves gracefully in and out of these pages, 29 by Mary Sojourner is equal parts real and ethereal and wholly entrancing.-
--FLAGSTAFF LIVE
- Sojourner] writes herself onto the page and bares all. Her characters personify past lovers and old friends, but ever apparent is the character of place.-
--ARIZONA DAILY SUN
-...wry, surreal, and tender...29 reminded me that literature is an ecstatic conversation between reader and author...-
--HIGH DESERT JOURNAL
-Ever-ascending Sojourner cooks up wrenching sorrow and hilarious banter, environmental and moral conundrums, magnetizing characters, and a place of transcendent beauty in this intoxicating, provocative, and gloriously told desert tale of wildness and community, unexpected bonds and deep legacies, trauma and healing.-
--BOOKLIST (starred review)
-This standout ecological novel from Arizona author Sojourner features picturesque prose, a vivid western setting, and sharply drawn characters.-
--PUBLISHERS WEEKLY (starred review)
-Notable characters carry Sojourner's powerful story of our connection to the earth. A profoundly affecting novel.-
--LIBRARY JOURNAL
-In Nell Walker, Mary Sojourner has created a character who discovers--in her own desperate way--the simple beauty in the interconnectedness of the natural world and the complexities we heap upon it. Written with passion and humor, 29 takes the reader on a journey of hope, humanity, and love.-
--JANA RICHMAN, author of Riding in the Shadows of Saints, The Last Cowgirl, and The Ordinary Truth
-29 is at the intersection of a local road to Nowhere and an interstate to Everywhere. Certainly Mary's prose and storytelling is crystalline and lovely, a kind of geode broth, filled with light and piquancy.-
--DAVID KRANES, author of The Legend's Daughter and The National Tree
-A love letter to what we frequently deem unloveable, 29 is a wide-armed triumph of hope.-
--LARAINE HERRING, author of Ghost Swamp Blues and Writing Begins with the Breath
-This is a story that will stay with the readers and, perhaps, bring them home to their own place, and the importance of fighting for what you love.-
--SUSAN LANG, author of the Mojave novels trilogy
-The language is sharp as a butcher's blade, the dialogue rings true and hard, and the story cuts deeply into its reader.-
--H. LEE BARNES, author of Cold Deck, The Lucky, and Car Tag
-Sojourner's new novel, much like the desert landscapes in which it is set, will never speak to those who see the Mojave as an annoying blur between L.A. and Vegas, but those adventurous enough (or lost enough) to wander off I-15 will find a world bursting with fragile beauty, tenacious life, and rock hard truth.-
--GILES CARWYN, author of Queen of Oblivion
Synopsis
"Ever-ascending Sojourner cooks up wrenching sorrow and hilarious banter, environmental and moral conundrums, magnetizing characters, and a place of transcendent beauty in this intoxicating, provocative, and gloriously told desert tale of wildness and community, unexpected bonds and deep legacies, trauma and healing."
--BOOKLIST (starred review) Nell Walker, an LA executive who believed she had everything and learns she had nothing, finds herself boarding a bus rolling away from bitter loss toward a fiercely beautiful landscape, an impossible love affair, and a fight for the earth that brings her back to a past richer than anything she could have imagined.
MARY SOJOURNER is the author of two novels, Sisters of the Dream and Going Through Ghosts; the short story collections The Talker and Delicate; an essay collection, Bonelight: Ruin and Grace in the New Southwest; and memoirs, Solace: Rituals of Loss and Desire and She Bets Her Life. She is an intermittent NPR commentator and the author of many essays, columns and op-eds for High Country News, Writers on the Range, and other publications. A graduate of the University of Rochester, Sojourner teaches writing in private circles, one-on-one, at colleges and universities, writing conferences, and book festivals. She believes in both the limitations and possibilities of healing through writing--the most powerful tool she has found for doing what is necessary to mend. She lives in Flagstaff, Arizona.
Synopsis
"Mary's prose and storytelling is crystalline and lovely, a kind of geode broth, filled with light and piquancy."
--DAVID KRANES
Nell Walker, an L.A. executive who believed she had everything and learns she had nothing, finds herself boarding a bus rolling away from bitter loss toward a fiercely beautiful landscape, an impossible love affair, and a fight for the earth that brings her back to a past richer than anything she could have imagined.
Synopsis
Nell Walker, a former Los Angeles executive who has lost everything, heads into the Mojave Desert, ending up in Twentynine Palms, California. Broke and broken, Nell delves into an impossible love affair amid a harshly glorious landscape whose vast cultural artifacts are threatened by solar power development. Unforeseen challenges push her into a spiral of new love, old loss, and unexpected redemption.
Mary Sojourner is the author of two novels, one short story collection, one essay collection, two memoirs, dozens of NPR commentaries, and magazine and newspaper columns. She lives in Flagstaff, Arizona.
About the Author
Mary Sojourner is the author of two novels, Sisters of the Dream and Going Through Ghosts; the short story collection, Delicate; an essay collection, Bonelight: Ruin and Grace in the New Southwest; and memoirs, Solace: Rituals of Loss and Desire and She Bets Her Life. She is an intermittent NPR commentator and the author of many essays, columns and op-eds for High Country News, Writers on the Range and other publications. A graduate of the University of Rochester, Sojourner teaches writing in private circles, one-on-one, at colleges and universities, writing conferences and book festivals. She believes in both the limitations and possibilities of healing through writingthe most powerful tool she has found for doing what is necessary to mend. She lives in Flagstaff, Arizona.