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Novelist and Folk Singer Willy Vlautin: Free Author Event and Folk Concert Celebrating his new book “The Horse”

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Novelist and Folk Singer Willy Vlautin: Free Author Event and Folk Concert Celebrating his new book “The Horse”

  • Tsunami Books 2585 Willamette St Eugene, OR, 97405 United States (map)

Wednesday, September 4, 7:30 PM, (7 door): Free concert! Novelist and Folk Singer Willy Vlautin: Reading, Talk, Folk Concert and Book-Signing Celebrating his new book “The Horse”

FREE!

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Willy Vlautin is the author of the novels The Motel Life, Northline, Lean on Pete, The Free, Don't Skip Out on Me, and The Night Always Comes. He is the founding member of the bands Richmond Fontaine and The Delines.

“"Like John Steinbeck and Raymond Carver before him, Vlautin excels at telling deeply felt stories about characters who are down on their luck. The Horse is a textbook Vlautin novel in all the best ways. . . . Told in spare prose, unsentimental but sincere, The Horse is a moving paean to the healing power of animals and music--and a damn good yarn, too." -- Esquire, Best Books of Summer 2024

Publisher Marketing:
"Willy Vlautin writes about people overlooked by society and overlooked by literature. In The Horse, he tells the story of a tenderhearted man who has a steady talent and a crushing addiction. It is both a work of extraordinary compassion and a really great novel." -- Ann Patchett, New York Times bestselling author of Tom Lake

"A moving tale of suffering and redemption, The Horse portrays the immense gravity of what it takes to be human in tough times, and the elusive grace that might just be grasped from music, animals, and memory." -- Geraldine Brooks, New York Times bestselling author of Horse

Award-winning author Willy Vlautin explores loneliness, art, regret, and hard-won empathy in this poignant novel--his most personal to date--that captures the life of a journeyman musician unable to escape the tragedies of his past.

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Booklist (05/15/2024):
*Starred Review* Sixtysomething songwriter Al Ward lives alone on an abandoned mine claim in the Nevada mountains without electricity or running water. He is mostly off the drink now, subsists solely on Campbell's condensed soup, and spends his waking moments, which frequently come in the middle of the night, working on songs until one morning when he discovers an injured, blind horse standing outside his shack. No stranger to symbolism, Al sees this as a sign, a mirror into his own battered psyche. Acclaimed novelist and songwriter Vlautin (The Night Always Comes, 2021) brilliantly blends his two vocations into a powerful, moving character study of a man imbued with a deep sadness. Al is a prolific songwriter whose songs speak to the broken and brokenhearted, and Vlautin shares dozens of song titles from Al's voluminous oeuvre, cleverly adding soulful depth to the narrative. Al strums the six-string while tugging at the heartstrings. The story shifts from Al's present circumstances to episodes throughout his life, including the acquisition of his first guitar, his many gigs with country acts on the casino circuit, and later success in a country punk band with two Mexican brothers. The novel itself feels like a classic song, a lament of a lonesome balladeer, resulting in a singular masterpiece. Vlautin has composed another classic. COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Review Quotes:

"Willy Vlautin writes about people overlooked by society and overlooked by literature. In The Horse, he tells the story of a tenderhearted man who has a steady talent and a crushing addiction. It is both a work of extraordinary compassion and a really great novel." -- Ann Patchett, New York Times Bestselling author of Tom Lake

"A moving tale of suffering and redemption, The Horse portrays the immense gravity of what it takes to be human in tough times, and the elusive grace that might just be grasped from music, animals, and memory." -- Geraldine Brooks, New York Times bestselling author of Horse

I loved this novel so much, though it broke my heart again and again. No one anywhere writes with such power and such stark beauty about American desperation and want, American loneliness and heartache. We need Willy Vlautin like we needed Johnny Cash, like we needed Larry McMurtry--he's essential and every book he writes proves it all over again." -- Joe Hill, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Full Throttle and Strange Weather

"I loved The Horse like I love all Willy Vlautin joints--for its melodic prose and its unflinching heart. This terrific parable of art and aging, laced within the bittersweet story of an old casino musician, is like the literary equivalent of a classic album by Tom Waits or Townes Van Zandt." -- Jess Walter, New York Times Bestselling Author of The Cold Millions and Beautiful Ruins

"There's not another writer out there, living or dead, that I trust with my heart more than Willy Vlautin, and he breaks it every damn time. In Al Ward's love and loss, in his decency, his pathos, and his struggle to endure, Vlautin has gifted us a paean to the power of song. The Horse is another classic from one of America's greatest storytellers." -- Jonathan Evison, New York Times Bestselling Author of Again and Again

"Might just be his masterpiece.... Set against the desolate majesty of the high desert, Vlautin's depiction of one broken soul trying to save another is aspirational, allegorical and, ultimately, transcendent." -- Los Angeles Times

"...enigmatic, beautiful ....The Horse taps a wealth of influences -- Hemingway, Johnny Cash, John Huston's film "The Misfits" - but Vlautin's cadences and wit are his alone, sharp and bracing, like shots of whiskey....He's a scribe of the underclass, reporting along the margins, teasing melodies from noise and silences....Mythical yet inventive, a struggle between man and beast, The Horse follows the playbook of The Old Man and the Sea or Julia Phillips's recent Bear weighing the totemic natural world against the frailties of the human condition."
-- Washington Post

"Vlautin's gritty novel....outlines the full circle of destructive creation....Heartbreak is a calling for this balladeer, and `The Horse'...savors its fleeting joys: `When you write a good tune and you know it's good, and you haven't played it for anyone, it's like holding hope in your pocket.'"
-- Wall Street Journal

"Musician and Lean on Pete author Willy Vlautin captures the American West like few other writers. His prose is always excellent, his characters always beautifully drawn, and that promises to be the case with his next novel, about an isolated Nevada man in his 60s who is visited by a blind horse that refuses to leave."
-- NPR

"Vlautin's great gift for detail, for evocation of a time and place, and his empathy are evident throughout. As with a story in a country song, even though you know at the outset how things will generally go, the delight is in the delivery and the details, and Vlautin does not disappoint."
-- Willamette Week

"Lively and moving....Vlautin writes frank, clear prose that matches the weather-beaten outlook and circumscribed prospects of his characters....Although The Horse is structured through reminiscence, it remains taut, defying the way flashback-heavy novels can sometimes dissipate tension, because Al's anecdotes are so precise and so germane -- distinctively peopled and full of colorful incident. Vlautin is a master of sliding into a flashback in a way that feels genuine. He intrigues the reader with a detail and then dives into the past with a knife-clean entry." -- High Country News

"The Horse is much more than a musician's tale....[it] is a novel of sorrow, of loneliness, of memory, guilt, reminiscence and regret. And finally, and most importantly, hope."
-- Under the Radar Magazine

"The novel itself feels like a classic song, a lament of a lonesome balladeer, resulting in a singular masterpiece. Vlautin has composed another classic." -- Booklist (starred review)

"Spare, restrained, unsentimental, yet full of emotion and force." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"Heartrending....Vlautin movingly conveys the power of music to reveal new possibilities in one's life. This shines." -- Publisher's Weekly

"There is something quietly glorious about a novelist who identifies a furrow for their writing and then ploughs it diligently and skillfully from one novel to the next....briskly sketched...richly conjured....as succinct and wrenching as a well-honed folk song." -- The Guardian

"Vlautin's most satisfying book to date.... The writing on music is superb; the underbelly of the working-band life, of the wannabes and never-gonna-bes rings so true here, you know Vlautin has lived part of it, seen a lot of it." -- Irish Times

"Holds hope - and a fair bit of music - in its heart." -- Daily Mail

'Moving back and forth between Ward's colourful, painful past and his current dilemma, Vlautin pays implicit tribute to talented, damaged outsiders who steadfastly pursue a creative vision, the result falling somewhere between Charles Bukowski and Cormac McCarthy." -- Buzz (UK)

'This is slower and more wistful; a country song. What his novels share is that, while they portray poverty and hardship, they do so with dignity, and his characters are not simply victims of their fates. Like the horse, they endure." -- New Statesman (UK)

'Funny, shocking and heartfelt, this is easily my book of the year so far." -- Big Issue (UK)