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<title>Matthew Ellison - Free Library Land Online - Ebooks</title>
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<title>Return to Independence Basin</title>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://ebooks.library.land/matthew-ellison/23507-return-to-independence-basin.html</guid>
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<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/1707281111/17913_return-to-independence-basin.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/1707281111/17913_return-to-independence-basin_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="Return to Independence Basin" alt ="Return to Independence Basin"/></a><br//>Kirkus Reviews Recommended Book: &quot;A haunting but hopeful story of the new West and the unlikely passions it stirs.&quot;KIRKUS REVIEW Recommended Book Award!A man returns to the small Western town where he grew up and finds that his family history won&rsquo;t stay buried in this debut novel.In 1979, Joe Meeks is a construction worker with a penchant for getting thrown off jobs for second-guessing the engineering. He&rsquo;s on a building site in New York City when his cousin Evan Gallantine shows up with both bad and good news: on the one hand, Joe&rsquo;s long-estranged father has died; on the other, his passing clears the way to sell the Meeks&rsquo; hardscrabble ranch for a handsome sum to dam developers. Joe goes to the town of Meagher, Montana, and then up to the Meeks ranch, to try to convince his ornery 90-year-old grandmother Frances, the last holdout among the local ranchers, to sell the spread. Joe brings along Wade, a 12-year-old boy who looks like him but whom he&rsquo;s reluctant to call his son, as he reconnects with Meagher&rsquo;s colorful denizens. As Wade falls in love with the ranch, Joe has misgivings about selling out and running from a guilty past. The novel effectively explores the conflict between yearning for the wider world and staying rooted in place, no matter how wretched the land and searing the memories. Feeling a bit like a mashup of Larry McMurtry and the 1990s TV series Northern Exposure, Ellison&rsquo;s tale features wonderfully evocative descriptions of Montana&rsquo;s majestic landscapes and richly atmospheric cow-town settings. Amid well-paced scenes and punchy, pitch-perfect dialogue, it also includes vivid, sharply individuated characters, including Joe&rsquo;s rapscallion ex-con uncle Harlo; Father Sterling, whose Sunday services are popular for their copiously alcoholic Communion libations; feisty redhead Marly Croft, an old flame of Joe&rsquo;s who wants to turn her decrepit Grand Hotel into a swanky inn to cater to Evan&rsquo;s visions of Meagher as an Aspen-style resort; and Marly&rsquo;s even feistier daughter Anne, whose native truculence (&ldquo;What&rsquo;re you lookin at?&rdquo;) subsides into an infatuation with Joe. There&rsquo;s also the elderly Frances, an ex-deputy who once shot a robber and then fielded a marriage proposal from the crook&rsquo;s partner. The final result is first-rate storytelling with a powerful emotional undercurrent.A haunting but hopeful story of the new West and the unlikely passions it stirs.]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Matthew Ellison / Business]]></category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 28 Jul 2017 11:11:28 +0300</pubDate>
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