I quite concur with David Abrams' warm assessment of Benjamin Percy's debut novel The Wilding. Writing for the Barnes and Noble review, Abrams says:
The Wilding wraps its arms around some big themes: the vanishing wilderness, a dissolving marriage, and the shell-shocked re-adjustment to domestic life after combat. It's a lot to pack into 250 pages, but Percy manages to do it with remarkable ease. His sentences have the simplicity and beauty of Shaker furniture, but he also writes meaty action scenes that never feel like they depart from the book's emotional core. No matter if we're facing danger in the jungles of Manhattan or the deep woods of Oregon, life really boils down to two questions: Will we live? and Will it hurt when I die? Percy takes his characters right up to the edge and forces them to stare, hard, into the maw of the mystery any attempt to answer them reveals.
I met Percy, after corresponding with him on and off for years, when we both taught in Nebraska earlier this year. I read his book prior to meeting him, hopeful I would like it, which I did (thankfully). I was also struck - as was Abrams - by Percy's quiet authority writing about the natural world, being as much a creature of cities as I am, both in life and in my reading. He also writes with real insight about fathers and sons, a subject of more than passing interest these days ...
The Wilding is excerpted in the current issue of Tin House, but sadly not online.
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