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Scratch

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

After an aimless life, Martin Blaskett is ready to settle down, unaware of the tension rising in his new town from unknowable forces. When he draws the attention of a shape-shifter from local legend, his world is shaken, and he is led across the hazy border of the feral wilderness with a tempestuous history.

Steve Himmer is author of the novels The Bee-Loud Glade and Fram. His stories have appeared in Hobart, Hawk & Handsaw, the Collagist, the Los Angeles Review, and elsewhere. He edits the web journal Necessary Fiction and teaches at Emerson College in Boston.

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    • Kirkus

      In a small New England town, a developer attempting to build a residential community in a forest clearing begins to notice and experience strange happenings in the surrounding woods.Martin Blaskett, the man at the center of Himmer's (Fram, 2015, etc.) eerie fable, has abandoned city life for a trailer on his construction site, where he intends to build the sort of "ballgames and barbecues" neighborhood that he's never lived in himself. (He hopes to settle there, too, and maybe one day start a family.) Things go south quickly, however: Martin gets lost in the woods and a bear attacks him; the town drunk disappears, and when Martin and his neighbor, an old hunter named Gil, go to the man's house to investigate, it appears an animal has ransacked the place; another key character goes missing. Could all of this have something to do with the shape-shifter the townspeople call Scratch who, according to local legend, roams the woods in various forms and can never die? Himmer's boldest choice is to make this otherworldly force his narrator. Inhabiting the body of a coyote, Scratch sometimes speaks directly to readers, inviting them at the novel's start to transform into coyotes, too ("you'll keep up more easily on faster legs than your own"). The writing is magnificently inventive throughout: at one point the shape-shifter offers the entire history of the woods near Martin's land in mere paragraphs. For a novel with so much going on, however, the pacing can, at times, feel slow. Himmer gives too much space to back story and dream sequences, making readers itchy to return to the here and now, and with the exception of the lovingly rendered Gil, none of the characters pop with nearly the force of the unconventional narrator at the novel's core. A terrific voice and premise, but ultimately the storyteller outshines the story. COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2016
      In a small New England town, a developer attempting to build a residential community in a forest clearing begins to notice and experience strange happenings in the surrounding woods.Martin Blaskett, the man at the center of Himmers (Fram, 2015, etc.) eerie fable, has abandoned city life for a trailer on his construction site, where he intends to build the sort of ballgames and barbecues neighborhood that hes never lived in himself. (He hopes to settle there, too, and maybe one day start a family.) Things go south quickly, however: Martin gets lost in the woods and a bear attacks him; the town drunk disappears, and when Martin and his neighbor, an old hunter named Gil, go to the mans house to investigate, it appears an animal has ransacked the place; another key character goes missing. Could all of this have something to do with the shape-shifter the townspeople call Scratch who, according to local legend, roams the woods in various forms and can never die? Himmers boldest choice is to make this otherworldly force his narrator. Inhabiting the body of a coyote, Scratch sometimes speaks directly to readers, inviting them at the novel's start to transform into coyotes, too (youll keep up more easily on faster legs than your own). The writing is magnificently inventive throughout: at one point the shape-shifter offers the entire history of the woods near Martin's land in mere paragraphs. For a novel with so much going on, however, the pacing can, at times, feel slow. Himmer gives too much space to back story and dream sequences, making readers itchy to return to the here and now, and with the exception of the lovingly rendered Gil, none of the characters pop with nearly the force of the unconventional narrator at the novels core. A terrific voice and premise, but ultimately the storyteller outshines the story.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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