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January 3, 2022
Cole’s nimble debut combines elements of Southern fiction, the campus novel, and youthful romance. Twenty-eight-year-old Owen Callahan, an aspiring writer, returns to his native Kentucky in 2016 after being semi-homeless in Colorado. He takes a job as a groundskeeper at Ashby College, where he audits a writing workshop and meets Alma Hadzics, the daughter of Bosnian immigrants. Alma has already published a book of short stories and is at Ashby on a fellowship. Alma has a sort of boyfriend, and she and Owen drift into a relationship that slowly becomes more serious. Inevitably, he introduces her to his dysfunctional family and she introduces him to her prosperous mother and father. Owen’s uncle Cort is a MAGA-lover, and Alma’s parents always have MSNBC on. In the end, it’s not politics that threatens to derail Owen and Alma’s romance but fealty to their own professional aspirations as Owen’s literary career begins to take off. Cole fills his novel with a gallery of fascinating supporting characters such as Owen’s conspiracy theorist coworker Rando; Owen’s grandfather, a WWII vet who keeps a VHS collection of classic westerns; and Alma’s Springsteen-loving father. And though Owen makes some questionable choices, he and Alma make for an odd couple worth rooting for. In the end, this is the strongest story about young writers in love since Andrew Martin’s Early Work.
June 1, 2022
Returning to his hometown in Kentucky, Owen Callahan lands a job working days as a groundskeeper for a private college and sleeps at night in the basement of his grandfather's house. A benefit is he can take a writing class; he wants to get his life back on track to become a writer. He meets Alma, another aspiring writer, at a party. They are attracted to each other, finally taking their relationship to the next step of meeting the families where opposing histories of family, class, religion, politics, privilege, and poverty poke holes in their relationship, causing the two young lovers to drift apart. Michael Crouch reads each part of this debut with great skill. Owen, who has the slightest of northern Kentucky accents, is distinctive compared with his family members who never left the area, retaining a thicker regional sound. Crouch mirrors similar voicings for Harvard grad and well-bred Alma and her parents, both highly educated immigrants from Bosnia whose English sounds learned. VERDICT Their union is "gone with the wind" when two lovers realize that the things they hold dearest don't align in this fascinating audio production of Cole's debut novel.--Stephanie Bange
Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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