Synopses & Reviews
With echoes of Cormac McCarthy, an exquisite debut novel from America's heartland.
Seventeen-year-old Walter Pascoe sets out for his first season as a sheep herder and learns quickly the dangers and beauties of the land. Also awakening to matters of the heart, Walter falls in love with a beautiful trapper named Trina Ivy. As they grow closer, America is on the brink of entering the First World War, and is beginning to feel an economic strain and a growing sense of patriotism. When Walter is drafted, he is bound by duty to leave the land and his lover to serve his country.
With an economic eloquence and an ear for the poetry that permeates life lived close to the land, Parkinson deftly illuminates the rituals and disturbances of her characters' world. She sketches the strong bonds and shifting alliances, the intimacy and insularity of family and social life in the fledgling towns of the American West. Amidst the quiet passion that builds between lovers kept apart by miles of prairie and months of seasonal work, the slow specter of war is creeping over a world that heretofore had seemed immutable.
An epic novel about the brutality of nature, the yearnings of first love and the realities of war, Across Open Ground is a remarkable achievement. Parkinson has written a deceptively quiet work of staggering depth, infused with dignity and heartwrenching emotion.
Review
"Heather Parkinson deftly captures the compelling allure of the isolation and beauty that has drawn men and women to the high mountain West....A powerful story, as much about change as about love and war." Denver Post
Review
"A beautifully written love story....You lean into stories like these, turning the pages quickly to get to the parts where the lovers finally enter their own world and leave the world of suffering outside." Los Angeles Times Book Review
Review
"[Parkinson] paints with words so clear and precise that we are immediately transported through time and space to a storm-bedeviled sheep drive in the Wood River Valley area during World War I." Idaho Statesman
Synopsis
Parkinson's epic novel about the brutality of nature, the yearnings of first love, and the realities of war, now in paperback.
About the Author
Heather Parkinson is twenty-eight. She lives in Idaho. This is her first novel.