Homestead
(Book)

Book Cover
Average Rating
Published
New York : Flatiron Books, [2023].
Status
Central - Adult Fiction
F MOUST
1 available
Westover - Adult Fiction
F MOUST
1 available

Copies

LocationCall NumberStatus
Central - Adult FictionF MOUSTAvailable
Westover - Adult FictionF MOUSTAvailable

Description

From NATIONAL BOOK FOUNDATION 5 UNDER 35 HONOREE and FLANNERY O'CONNOR AWARD WINNER Melinda Moustakis, a debut novel set in Alaska, about the turbulent marriage of two unlikely homesteaders“A beautiful novel, quiet as a snowfall, warm as a glowing wood stove…Admirers of Marilynne Robinson and Alice Munro are bound to appreciate.” —NPR“Spare and exquisite, tough and lovely. The sentences build on themselves, becoming expansive and staggering in their sweep.” —The New York Times Book ReviewAnchorage, 1956. When Marie and Lawrence first lock eyes at the Moose Lodge, they are immediately drawn together. But when they decide to marry, days later, they are more in love with the prospect of homesteading than anything else. For Lawrence, his parcel of 150 acres is an opportunity to finally belong in a world that has never delivered on its promise. For Marie, the land is an escape from the empty future she sees spinning out before her, and a risky bet is better than none at all. But over the next few years, as they work the land in an attempt to secure a deed to their homestead, they must face everything they don’t know about each other. As the Territory of Alaska moves toward statehood and inexorable change, can Marie and Lawrence create something new, or will they break apart trying? Immersive and wild-hearted, joyfully alive to both the intimate and the elemental, Homestead is an unflinching portrait of a new state and of the hard-fought, hard-bitten work of making a family.

More Details

Format
Book
Edition
First edition.
Physical Desc
259 pages ; 25 cm
Language
English
ISBN
9781250845559, 1250845556

Notes

Description
"When Marie and Lawrence first lock eyes at the Moose Lodge, they are immediately drawn together. But when they decide to marry, days later, they are more in love with the promise of homesteading than anything. For Lawrence, his parcel of 150 acres is an opportunity to finally belong in a world that has never delivered on its promise. For Marie, the land is an escape from the empty future she sees spinning out before her, and a risky bet is better than none at all. But over the next few years, as they work the land in an attempt to secure a deed to their homestead, they must face everything they don't know about each other. As the Territory of Alaska moves toward statehood and inexorable change, can Marie and Lawrence create something new, or will they break apart trying?"-- Provided by publisher.

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Although these are dramatic, character-driven historical novels, the place, Alaska, may be the star. To the Bright Edge is a novel of exploration in the 1880s; Homestead is a novel of settlement in 1950s Alaska just before statehood. -- Michael Shumate
Featuring a great sense of place, these dramatic novels portray families trying to tame Alaska while the men of the family also try to tame inner demons from their wartime experiences in Korea (Homestead) and Vietnam (The Great Alone). -- Michael Shumate

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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Fleeing memories of his abbreviated service, Korean War veteran Lawrence stakes his claim on a parcel of free land in the Alaska Territory. At an Anchorage bar, he meets Marie, a young woman ostensibly visiting her sister in Alaska, who is determined not to return to her native Texas. The promise of Lawrence's 150 acres is all that it takes for her to agree to a date and then marriage. Virtual strangers, their first year of marriage is marked by joy and tragedy, birth and death as Lawrence struggles to tame both the wilderness and his own demons, and Marie seeks to reconcile her troubled childhood with the woman she has become. Under U.S. law, living on the land in a habitable dwelling and farming 20 acres constitutes ownership. But what rights are given to those who have spilled their blood or birthed and buried children there? And what about the Native people for whom this very land was home for generations? Inspired by Moustakis' own family history and set during the Alaskan Territory's bid for statehood, this stunning debut novel considers what it truly means to own land. Recommended for fans of Kristin Hannah's The Great Alone (2018).

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Moustakis shines in her debut, the dramatic rendering of a young couple's homesteader life in mid-1950s Alaska. Marie Kubala, having fled a dreary life in Texas, visits her sister and her husband, Sly, in Alaska, hoping to find a husband. Meanwhile, Lawrence Beringer, a Korean war vet from a small Minnesota farm, arrives with big dreams for his 150-acre claim in the Alaskan territory. The two meet at a lodge, where they bond over a shared excitement at the prospect of owning their own land. Moustakis adroitly traces their trajectory as they marry and throw themselves into the rigors of setting up a home in the wild. It takes a while for Lawrence to become intimate with Marie, and their relationship strengthens under false pretenses after he lies about adding her name to the land deed. Later, they face devastating challenges while trying to start a family, as well as catastrophic dangers in the wild, and Marie's questions about the deed push them to a boiling point. The wondrous descriptions of the back-breaking labor involved in clearing and farming the land, and of the region's vast beauty, will make readers feel like they're there. This evocative, well-drawn account of Alaska's American settlers is so convincing it ought to come with a pair of mittens. Agent: Bill Clegg, Clegg Agency. (Feb.)

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Kirkus Book Review

Think you've put in your time with emotionally unavailable men? Try making a marriage in the Alaskan wilderness with Lawrence Beringer. Homesteading in Alaska in the 1950s isn't for the faint of heart. To secure a deed to the 150 acres outside Anchorage where he's staked his claim, Lawrence must build a cabin and successfully cultivate the land--no small task given the territory's bitter winters, the dense forest to be cleared, and the bears and wolves always happy to remind him he's on their turf. Lawrence is a determined loner who dreams of a better life than his parents had back in Minnesota, and he hits the jackpot when Marie Kubala, attracted by the cut of his jaw and the prospect of those 150 acres, agrees to become his wife. They're ready for a challenge, but neither realizes the work of knowing each other and forging a marriage will prove even more daunting than taming their bit of the great outdoors. Moustakis excels at conjuring place: You can feel the wind, taste the homemade cherry wine that fuels the couple's labors, and sense the chill loneliness that is their isolated lives, even with frequent visits from Marie's sister, Sheila, and her husband, Sly, who live in town. Lawrence's struggles with intimacy are finely rendered as well, though the reason for them has a whiff of cliché: Hiding trauma and survivor's guilt from his service in the Korean War, he resists Marie's urging to open up. (He's the kind of guy for whom "Wood won't chop itself" counts as conversation.) The birth of their daughter complicates Marie's relationship with Sheila, who longs for a child but has had no luck, and brings Marie and Lawrence closer while also testing them. A grizzly might get you on your way to the lake, but months with a colicky baby will make that walk seem well worth it. Nuanced and suffused with poetry, Moustakis' novel paints an indelible portrait of a couple finding their way in the wilderness. An atmospheric debut about the savagery of nature, learning to trust, and the wilds that exist within all of us. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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Booklist Reviews

*Starred Review* Fleeing memories of his abbreviated service, Korean War veteran Lawrence stakes his claim on a parcel of free land in the Alaska Territory. At an Anchorage bar, he meets Marie, a young woman ostensibly visiting her sister in Alaska, who is determined not to return to her native Texas. The promise of Lawrence's 150 acres is all that it takes for her to agree to a date and then marriage. Virtual strangers, their first year of marriage is marked by joy and tragedy, birth and death as Lawrence struggles to tame both the wilderness and his own demons, and Marie seeks to reconcile her troubled childhood with the woman she has become. Under U.S. law, living on the land in a habitable dwelling and farming 20 acres constitutes ownership. But what rights are given to those who have spilled their blood or birthed and buried children there? And what about the Native people for whom this very land was home for generations? Inspired by Moustakis' own family history and set during the Alaskan Territory's bid for statehood, this stunning debut novel considers what it truly means to own land. Recommended for fans of Kristin Hannah's The Great Alone (2018). Copyright 2022 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2022 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

The Emmy Award—winning Calvi (Dear George, Dear Mary) returns with the story of a young Teddy Roosevelt wooing Boston belle Alice Lee in If a Poem Could Live and Breathe (60,000-copy first printing). Three Souls author Chang goes hardcover with The Porcelain Moon, about a young Chinese woman who flees her uncle's Paris home in 1918 to avoid an arranged marriage, seeking a cousin in the French countryside working with the Chinese Labour Corps and befriending a Frenchwoman who wants quit of her abusive husband (50,000-copy first printing). Set in 1940s Trinidad, when British colonialism and U.S. occupation were folding, Commonwealth Short Story Prize winner Hosein's Hungry Ghosts contrasts the lives of wealthy farm owners Dalton and Marlee Changoor and their impoverished workers, with the plot driven by Dalton's disappearance (100,000-copy first printing). In Code Name Sapphire, from World War II fiction titan Jenoff, Hannah Martel flees Nazi Germany for Brussels and joins the Sapphire Line, which spirits downed Allied airmen to safety; when her cousin Lily's family is slated for deportation, she must decide whether she should risk trying to rescue them (350,000-copy paperback and 10,000-copy hardcover first printing). Best-selling thriller writer Labuskes turns to historical fiction with The Librarian of Burned Books, which moves from U.S. author Althea James's discovery of Nazi resisters in 1933 Berlin to German refugee Hannah Brecht's work at the German Library of Burned Books in 1936 Paris to Vivian Childs's efforts in 1944 New York to block the censorship of the Armed Service Editions, paperbacks shipped to soldiers overseas (100,000-copy paperback and 30,000-copy hardcover first printing). Writing under his father's Lithuanian surname, Maetis, British thriller writer John Matthews takes readers to 1938 Vienna, where members of The Vienna Writers Circle fear that the Anschluss means they won't be able to write and then fear for their very survival (50,000-copy first printing). In Canadian author Marshall's best-selling debut, Angela Creighton's discovery in 2017 of a long-misplaced letter with great import to her family sends her Looking for Jane, with Jane the codename for a network providing illegal abortions in 1970s-80s Toronto. Winner of the Flannery O'Connor Award and National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 honors for Bear Down, Bear North: Alaska Stories, Moustakis tries out full-length fiction in Homestead, about a couple named Marie and Lawrence who marry impulsively and then learn about each other while homesteading in Alaska as it nears statehood (75,000-copy first printing). In Pulitzer Prize-winning Verble's Stealing, a Cherokee girl named Kit Crockett is taken from her home in 1950s bayou country and sent to a Christian boarding school intent on expunging her heritage (50,000-copy first printing).

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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Moustakis shines in her debut, the dramatic rendering of a young couple's homesteader life in mid-1950s Alaska. Marie Kubala, having fled a dreary life in Texas, visits her sister and her husband, Sly, in Alaska, hoping to find a husband. Meanwhile, Lawrence Beringer, a Korean war vet from a small Minnesota farm, arrives with big dreams for his 150-acre claim in the Alaskan territory. The two meet at a lodge, where they bond over a shared excitement at the prospect of owning their own land. Moustakis adroitly traces their trajectory as they marry and throw themselves into the rigors of setting up a home in the wild. It takes a while for Lawrence to become intimate with Marie, and their relationship strengthens under false pretenses after he lies about adding her name to the land deed. Later, they face devastating challenges while trying to start a family, as well as catastrophic dangers in the wild, and Marie's questions about the deed push them to a boiling point. The wondrous descriptions of the back-breaking labor involved in clearing and farming the land, and of the region's vast beauty, will make readers feel like they're there. This evocative, well-drawn account of Alaska's American settlers is so convincing it ought to come with a pair of mittens. Agent: Bill Clegg, Clegg Agency. (Feb.)

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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Moustakis, M. (2023). Homestead (First edition.). Flatiron Books.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Moustakis, Melinda, 1982-. 2023. Homestead. New York: Flatiron Books.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Moustakis, Melinda, 1982-. Homestead New York: Flatiron Books, 2023.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Moustakis, M. (2023). Homestead. First edn. New York: Flatiron Books.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Moustakis, Melinda. Homestead First edition., Flatiron Books, 2023.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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