Reasons to Leave the Slaughter

Ben Clark2011
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Reasons to Leave the Slaughter exists in a landscape that is all expansive space and wonder, a world that carries within it endless corridors of time and opportunity. This is a "farm life” that will surely lure you in with stories that call for imaginative romps through the pastures, down to the pond, or up the perfect climbing tree. However it also proves to be a place of broken limbs, jealousies flaring up between brothers, unwieldy advice handed down from a father, poverty, and love found then lost again. Reasons to Leave the Slaughter speaks of the balance between our desperate human need to own a place and call it home, and nature's constant battling back with infestations, tornados crumpling new buildings into dust, an animal's unforeseen death. Reasons to Leave the Slaughter is told through numerous voices, young and old, male and female, human or animal, and with enough space and time to allow the fantastic to take up equal residence alongside reality. Think of Marquez and Murakami's magic. Think of Li-Young Lee's simple quiet elegance. Think of James Wright's earthiness. Think of Richard Siken's honest violent passion. This book revels in all of this, in youthful discovery, in the hopes and despairs of those growing old without seeming purpose, in the ever-present balance between beauty and brutality, and above all, in life.

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