Reseña del editor:
Aaron Roy Evan's startling, imagistic debut takes its cue from a true event: In 1936, in a small town near Charlottesville, Virginia, an aging black caretaker and his sister shot dead a white sheriff acting on orders to turn them off their land, In, BLOODROOT, Even explores the circumstances leading up to this violent standoff and the tragedy that followed as seen through the eyes of Elsa, a young county employee fresh out of school and filled with aspiration and illusion, and those of Wesley, the 50-year old caretaker of a vanished family's estate. While Elsa struggles to retain her authority and self-respect, Wesley is haunted by past concessions and his sister's attachment to the land. When he stands in the way of a proposed turpentine plant by refusing the county's purchase offer, both Elsa and Wesley find themselves moving relentlessly toward an end neither wants to reach. The novel's title is taken from the flower: native to Virginia, its tie to the land is so strong that its roots bleed red when cut.
Biografía del autor:
Aaron Roy Even was born in Washington D.C. and grew up in Herndon, Virginia. In 1995, he received an M.F.A in fiction writing from the University of Virginia, where he studied under a Henry Hoyns Fellowship. His first novel, "Bloodroot," won the 1999 AWP/Thomas Dunne Books Novel Award. He currently lives in Chicago with his wife, Monica.
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