RETURN TO INDEPENDENCE BASIN
"You can't leave home if you've never left."
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Kirkus Review: Recommended Book February 2017
"...A man returns to the small western town where he grew up and
finds that his family history won’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’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’s long-estranged father has died;
on the other, his passing clears the way to sell the Meeks’ 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’s reluctant to call his son, as he reconnects with Meagher’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’s
tale features wonderfully evocative descriptions of Montana’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’s rapscallion ex-con uncle Harlo; Father Sterling,
whose Sunday services are popular for their copiously alcoholic Communion
libations; feisty redhead Marly Croft, old flame of Joe’s who wants to turn her
decrepit Grand Hotel into a swanky inn to cater to Evan’s visions of Meagher as
an Aspen-style resort; and Marly’s even feistier daughter Anne, whose native
truculence (“What’re you lookin at?”) subsides into an infatuation with Joe.
There’s also the elderly Frances, an ex-deputy who once shot a robber and then
fielded a marriage proposal from the crook’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..."