DAMNATION SPRING
詛咒之春
內容介紹
- 文學網路媒體Lit Hub 2021年最受期待的書之一
- 美國書評網Book Riot最受期待的2021年發行之一
- 圖書館雜誌2021年新星之一
- 圖書館雜誌2021年值得關注的標題之一
「艾許.大衛森提醒我們,環境對我們的塑造從未如我們破壞它之時那樣深刻。這本書幾乎每一頁都令我敬畏。」——安東尼·馬拉(Antonio Marra),《生命現象的星座》作者
「《詛咒之春》,正如故事中心的紅杉林一樣,是一本美麗、永恆、令人嘆為觀止的小說。它經過精心的研究和深情的寫作,最重要的是,作者對自己的人物極度敏感和溫柔,讓角色對讀者如鄰居或家人一般親密。時間是評估藝術品質的最佳方法,但依我的判斷,這本書具有經典之作的所有素質,這是一部偉大的美國小說。——尼可拉斯·巴特勒,《獵槍情歌》作者
一場史詩般,宛如身臨其境的首演。《詛咒之春》是一個深刻的人性故事,講述了一個西北太平洋伐木小鎮被謎團扳成兩半,致使生活從此脫軌失序。
李奇·岡德森的家族世代,以在加州海岸砍伐紅木森林維生。現在,李奇和他的妻子柯林就在這片人稱詛咒森林的地帶撫養兒子。這片古老的紅杉林屬於李奇的老闆——桑德森木材公司計劃殺伐的地方。1977年,美國大多數的森林被砍伐或保護,像詛咒森林之類的小樹林(超過24-7山脊),是伐木者的夢想。
這是危險的工作。李奇的父親在工作中喪生,他已經比他的父親多活了數十年。李奇希望為他的兒子小鰷魚提供更好的生活,因此當他有機會購買24-7山脊時,他便抓住了這個機會,投入家裡未來新成員會需要的全部積蓄,而柯林對此毫不知情。因為現實是,他們的家庭沒有新生兒的誕生;柯林流產數次。小鎮上同樣的境況,不是只發生在她一人身上,她並不孤單。這是柯林作為助產士親眼所見。
幾十年來,伐木公司使用的除草劑普遍認為是無害的,但是柯林已開始懷疑除草劑對人體的影響。如果這些流產,不是突如其來的橫禍,那該怎麼辦?隨著泥石流沖刷清晰的山體,鮭魚消失於溪流中,她執意尋找答案,不僅可能破壞了李奇對24-7山脊的計劃,包括他們的婚姻,並使一個生命都在木頭上兜轉流迴的小鎮就此分裂。
《 詛咒之春》,這本從李奇、柯林和小鰷魚的角度講述的散文,宛如春日流淌的小溪般清朗,親切溫暖且極富同情心,深刻地描繪出社區在環境惡化的危險中仍執著不捨的舊日生活,使《 詛咒之春》成為當代極為重要的小說。
相關影片
書評
“Probably the best novel I’ll read this year. It’s about work and love and characters who ring true.” —Stephen King
“A glorious book—an assured novel that’s gorgeously told... Redwoods have been plundered by humans, damaged in fires and taken down in floods, but they’re also incredibly resilient. And as characters in Davidson’s graceful rendering remind us, humans are equally resilient. After great loss, they, too, can keep growing.”—The New York Times Book Review
“With great empathy and care, Davidson demonstrates how competing values play out against a backdrop of climate change in America.”—The New Yorker
“[An] ambitious debut [that] gains momentum as Davidson pulls together its foundational concepts— family, work, honor, and loyalty. Damnation Spring is full of surprises.”—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
“[This] story runs as clear as the mountain streams that draw salmon back to spawn... Damnation Spring joins Richard Powers’s Overstory and Annie Proulx’s Barkskins in a growing collection of epic novels about our interactions with trees.”—The Washington Post
“An incredibly moving epic about an unforgettable family.” —CBS Sunday Morning
“[With] the page-turning urgency of a thriller…the novel tells many characters’ stories—affirming, in the end, the strength of community. Davidson’s prose is absolutely beautiful, every detail immersing us in this landscape fully and seamlessly as she reveals characters’ tensions, longings, disappointments, and their attachment to the land. Damnation Spring is a must-read for environmentalists above all.” —EcoLit Books
“In her exceptional debut novel, Ash Davidson expresses the heart and soul of Northern California's redwood forest community.” —BookPage
“[A] powerful debut novel... [A] showdown as inevitable as a mudslide [propels] the community down a path as steep and treacherous as any logging road. It’s a path Davidson portrays in exquisite detail... In Damnation Spring, giant trees are brought low by human machinations. Communities can be, too.”—The Boston Globe
“Pitch perfect…an unforgettable portrait of the very real consequences that environmental decay can hold, for nature and humanity alike.”—VOGUE.com
“This debut novel drops readers into redwood country, where loggers tangle with ‘tree-huggers’ and families eke out a living. Like her majestic setting, Davidson provides danger and warmth.” —New York Times Book Review, gift-giving feature
“[An] astonishingly polished and immensely affecting debut novel... What makes Damnation Spring such a knockout — and so devastating to stomach — is Davidson’s mature grasp of the precarity of life and the complexities of the human condition.It’s the Gundersons’ fierce love for each other and unwavering resilience despite multiple betrayals and near unshakeable losses that transform the book from a treatise on the dangers of an unfettered industrial complex and the impacts of climate change into a prescient and deeply felt novel about (mostly) good people just doing their best to survive.”—San Francisco Chronicle
“[A] spine-tingling debut.”—Oprah Daily
“A beautifully immersive debut...a compassionate portrayal of a family and community clinging to a quickly vanishing way of life.”—Arizona Daily Sun
“If you’re jonesing for a big family saga, Ash Davidson’s debut will do the trick. Damnation Spring tackles major issues with authentic rage and grief.” —LA Times
“[An] ambitious, assured debut...a devastating page-turner with a love story at its center.”—LitHub
“This one might be the best novel of the year. It’s this incredible story that is being compared to John Steinbeck…I usually just brush off those comparisons, but I think it’s actually worthy.”—WBEZ Nerdette Podcast
“There is so much that is right and particular about this novel. Rarely will a reader have such a tactile experience of life in a forest logging community as one receives here. Davidson also sensitively portrays the fraught relationship between the Indigenous tribe of Yuroks and the white members of the logging community. Here, all politics are local: It slowly dawns on Colleen that herbicides, sprayed to help the logging industry, hurt babies; and the unethical owner of the timber company is a flawed and greedy local guy, not a corporate mover on Wall Street. Davidson was born in Arcata, California, just south of the redwood forest she writes about in Damnation Spring. She’s studied the lay of the land, and she expresses the heart and soul of this place and time.”—BookPage (starred review)
“As thoughtfully as Davidson establishes these dilemmas, she’s equally skilled at writing an outdoorsy adventure novel, in which logging threatens the lives of workers with snapped cables and everybody else via landslides. Thematically, it’s a strong work of climate fiction, but it's rooted in age-old man-versus-nature storytelling. An impressively well-turned story about how environmental damage creeps into our bodies, psyches, and economies.”—Kirkus (starred review)
“Davidson’s impressive debut chronicles life in a working-class community so thoroughly that the reader feels the characters’ anguish as they’re divided over environmental concerns that threaten their lives and livelihoods....The depiction of ordinary people trapped by circumstances beyond their control makes for a heart-wrenching modern American tragedy.”—Publisher's Weekly
“Well-researched…this lengthy novel spans just one year over four decades ago—the summer of 1977 to the summer of 1978—but it couldn’t be more relevant today.”—The Daily Beast
“Struggles and heartbreaks play out on the richly rendered backdrop of a community on the brink of major change.”—Booklist
“In her astonishingly accomplished first novel, Ash Davidson reminds us that we are never more profoundly shaped by our environment than when we destroy it. Nearly every page left me in awe.” —Anthony Marra, author of A Constellation of Vital Phenomena
“Damnation Spring is that wonderful evocation of a world so complete you can’t believe it’s fiction, each character and moment drawn with precision and heart. Davidson crafts a portrait of a marriage inside a portrait of a town inside a portrait of an industry, refracting the consequences of capitalism through people’s lives and bodies. A masterful and sensitive explication of how humans are part of their environment no less than trees, mud, other animals, and water, this novel takes place forty years ago but could not be more relevant. If you want to know how we came to find ourselves amid an extinction event, or you need a gripping escape from considering the same, read this book.” — Merritt Tierce, author of Love Me Back
“Nowhere else on earth do the trees reach so high as the ancient groves of redwoods that tower over the fog-laced coast of the Pacific Northwest. And in few other settings can a writer erect an overstory so vast, so intricate, so tightly woven that when its readers lean back and gaze into its branches, they are somehow made to feel both diminished and expanded in the very same breath. Like the canopy of an enchanted forest, Damnation Spring is draped in a tapestry of shadows dappled with sunlight, mystery pierced through by beams of revelation, and a harrowing natural beauty capable of drawing forth gorgeous, gracefully wrought prose that is soaring, magnificent, and drenched in birdsong.” —Kevin Fedarko, author of The Emerald Mile
“Unavoidable, maybe, but Damnation Spring recalls Kesey’s Sometimes a Great Notion, a big, rollicking crowd pleaser of a family saga set in hardscrabble logging country. Ash Davidson’s homespun characters aren’t just local color. Like their community, they face a reckoning as their lives and livelihoods collide with the wider world.” —Stewart O’Nan, author of A World Away and Songs for the Missing
“With its lavishly evoked, fog-bound rainforest, its sawtooth humor, shifting narrative perspectives, and testosterone-fueled battles against nature, Damnation Spring inevitably recalls Ken Kesey's Sometimes A Great Notion. But Ash Davidson treads boldly beyond Kesey's narrow vision to the profit motives that exploit a brutal machismo culture, bereft of health or humanity. Most poignantly, she gives voice to the women whose lives and unborn children succumb to chemical and timber company bottom lines. Her scenes of childbirth, grief, and helpless rage mirror in heartbreaking detail the reality of families in the poisoned, strip-mined clearcuts of the Pacific Northwest today.” —Carol Van Strum, author of A Bitter Fog: Herbicides and Human Rights, and The Oreo File
“Ash Davidson writes with unwavering compassion—for bitterly divided families, for those with fatally opposed ideologies, for our fragile natural world. Such is the rare generosity of spirit that has produced Damnation Spring—an elegant novel of profound power and grace.” —Madhuri Vijay, author of The Far Field
“So absorbing is Damnation Spring, so rich with the atmosphere of a time and a place, that when I laid the book down it was hard not to look around my living room and wonder where the redwoods had gone. What impresses me the most about Ash Davidson and her writing is how deeply she understands her characters, and how sharply she has observed their world, yet how little fuss she makes about it. There's not an ounce of ego on display here, which means that it's never the singer you hear, always the song. And the song, in this case, is magnificent.”—Kevin Brockmeier, author of The Ghost Variations and The Brief History of the Dead
“Damnation Spring is, like the redwood trees at the center of its story, a beautiful, timeless, and breathtaking novel. It is painstakingly researched and lovingly crafted. But most importantly, the author is incredibly sensitive and tender with her characters, who, for the reader, quickly become as close as neighbors or family. Ultimately, time is the best judge of artistic quality, but for me, this book has all the makings of a classic. It is, in my estimation, a Great American Novel. A novel that tips its cap at writers like Steinbeck and Kesey, but also confidently forges ahead, blazing new paths. Just – a stunning, wondrous book.” —Nickolas Butler, author of Shotgun Lovesongs and Little Faith
“Damnation Spring dignifies the working-class experience with complicated characters whose hopes and heartbreaks at once transcend and are defined by their relationship to labor. Davidson evokes a story so vivid that readers will smell the trees, feel the damp, and—most importantly—care about a family.” —Sarah Smarsh, author of Heartland
“A sweeping family saga of love and grief and the deeply personal tragedies that occur when our planet is abused. This is the kind of novel I’ve been craving for ages. Ambitious in its scope, masterful in its execution. This stunning story, written in pitch-perfect prose, announces Ash Davidson as a major new voice in American Literature. Every page stirred my soul.” —Emily Ruskovich, author of Idaho
得獎紀錄
Named a Best Book of 2021 by Amazon, Kirkus, and BookPage
海外授權
UK & BC (Tinder Press/Headline)
France (Actes Sud)