West: A Novel

Named a Best Book of the Year by The Sunday Times (UK) * The Guardian (UK) * The Washington Independent Review of Books * Sydney Morning Herald * The Los Angeles Public Library * The Irish Independent * Real Simple *

Finalist for the Rathbones Folio Prize

“Carys Davies is a deft, audacious visionary.” —Téa Obreht

When widowed mule breeder Cy Bellman reads in the newspaper that colossal ancient bones have been discovered in the salty Kentucky mud, he sets out from his small Pennsylvania farm to see for himself if the rumors are true: that the giant monsters are still alive and roam the uncharted wilderness beyond the Mississippi River. Promising to write and to return in two years, he leaves behind his only daughter, Bess, to the tender mercies of his taciturn sister and heads west.

With only a barnyard full of miserable animals and her dead mother’s gold ring to call her own, Bess, unprotected and approaching womanhood, fills lonely days tracing her father’s route on maps at the subscription library and waiting for his letters to arrive. Bellman, meanwhile, wanders farther and farther from home, across harsh and alien landscapes, in reckless pursuit of the unknown.

From Frank O’Connor Award winner Carys Davies, West is a spellbinding and timeless epic-in-miniature, an eerie parable of the American frontier and an electric monument to possibility.

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Published Apr 2, 2019

161 pages

Average rating: 8

2 RATINGS

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Community Reviews

Margaret.n.f
Nov 16, 2024
8/10 stars
Slow beginning but crashes to a finish. Following parallel journeys of an explorers and the daughter he leaves behind. Worth reading
Carol.Ann
Nov 16, 2023
8/10 stars
"...whatever your own idea of the known world, there were always things outside it you haven't dreamed of."

Never have I read passages that tell such a powerful, visual tale with so few words. Even now, I look back over the short 160 pages of this story and I don't know how the author did it. Her words are succinct, yet brilliantly relate conversation, emotion, thoughts, environment, and experiences of the characters while steadily building in intensity and suspense.

I agree with Jenny that the story ends abruptly. This surprised me and I wasn't sure I liked it or the ending itself. But it gave me pause and the more I thought about it, the more I realized that I did like it - a lot. I gained more admiration for Bess, the Mule Breeder's young daughter, who along with her father, had the strength and courage to choose for herself what she would believe and what she would do with it.

"...he could only say that what he'd read in a newspaper had produced a fierce beating of his heart, a prickling at the edge of his being, and there was nothing he wanted more now than to see the enormous creatures with his own two eyes."

Beautifully written, this story will suck you in and hold you there to the end.

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