

" bleak yet emotionally authentic chronicle. A gut-punch of a bleak family saga that satisfies on many levels." - Kirkus Reviews (starred review) His characters may well brand a reader's memory. He writes terse prose whittled to essentials and grained with vernacular. Like Cormac McCarthy, another bard of the modern West's brutality, Holbert finds beauty and cruelty in the land, in the tease and punch of eloquently elliptical dialogue, and in the way humans struggle for love, self-knowledge, and a grip on life. Whiskey punches you in the gut, a blow that lands right at your core." - BookPage

Reminiscent of stories by Cormac McCarthy or Annie Proulx. "s cool as a Western and as fundamental as the Bible. "The manic energy and memorable characters in Whiskey aren't far off from those created by Joseph Heller and Ken Kesey in those classics." - The Inlander With the gruff humor of Cormac McCarthy and a dash of the madcap irony of Charles Portis, and a strong, authentic literary voice all his own, Bruce Holbert traverses the harsh landscape of America's northwestern border and finds a family unlike any you've met before. Whiskey is the story of two brothers, their parents, and three wrecked marriages, a searching book about family life at its most distressed-about kinship, failure, enough liquor to get through it all, and ultimately a dark and hard-earned grace. Maybe the venture will break them both beyond repair or maybe it will redeem them. When a religious zealot takes off with Smoker's daughter, there's no question that his brother-who continues doggedly to try and put his life in order-will join him in an attempt to return her.
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Fiercely loyal and just plain fierce, they're bound by a series of darkly comedic and hauntingly violent events: domestic trouble religious fanaticism benders punctuated with pauses to dry out that never stick. The family lives in Electric City, Washington, just a few miles south of the Colville Indian Reservation. Whiskey burns pleasantly as it goes down, but has a lasting, powerful effect.īrothers Andre and Smoker were raised in a cauldron of their parents' failed marriage and appetite for destruction, and find themselves in the same straits as adults-navigating not only their own marriages, but also their parents' frequent collision with the law and one another.
