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Sorrowland

A Novel

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A TIME 100 Must-Read Book of 2021

A New York Times Best Science Fiction and Fantasy Book of 2021

The Stonewall Book Award winner of 2022
Named a Best Book of 2021 by NPR, The New York Public Library, Publishers Weekly and more!
A triumphant, genre-bending breakout novel from one of the boldest new voices in contemporary fiction.
Vern—seven months pregnant and desperate to escape the strict religious compound where she was raised—flees for the shelter of the woods. There, she gives birth to twins, and plans to raise them far from the influence of the outside world.
But even in the forest, Vern is a hunted woman. Forced to fight back against the community that refuses to let her go, she unleashes incredible brutality far beyond what a person should be capable of, her body wracked by inexplicable and uncanny changes.
To understand her metamorphosis and to protect her small family, Vern has to face the past, and more troublingly, the future—outside the woods. Finding the truth will mean uncovering the secrets of the compound she fled but also the violent history in America that produced it.
Rivers Solomon's Sorrowland is a genre-bending work of Gothic fiction. Here, monsters aren't just individuals, but entire nations. It is a searing, seminal book that marks the arrival of a bold, unignorable voice in American fiction.

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    • Library Journal

      December 1, 2020

      Vern lives in the woods, isolated from society and determined to raise her twins far from its baleful influence. But now her body is undergoing strange transformations, and she looks back aghast at a religious compound she fled, where society's marginalized were subjected to dehumanizing treatment and medical experimentation. From the author of The Deep, a collaborative novella that was a finalist for the Hugo, Nebula, Locus, and Lambda Literary Awards.

      Copyright 2020 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2021
      A Lambda Award-winning writer explores America's dark history of brutalizing Black bodies in their latest work of speculative fiction. Vern is a young woman raising her twin babies in a forest, dressing them in the hides of animals she's hunted and hiding them away in makeshift shelters. Vern is being followed by ghosts and stalked by someone who butchers animals and dresses them in infants' clothes. Both are connected to the Black separatist commune from which Vern has escaped. As a parasite takes over her body, Vern develops superhuman powers and begins to suspect that she is a test subject being used by the United States government. There's a lot going on here--perhaps too much. The novel starts out strong; the portion of the narrative in which Vern and her children are fending for themselves in the wilderness has the feel of folklore, and the idea that she is haunted by the experience of her ancestors is evocative. As Solomon moves further into the realms of science fiction, though, their voice loses much of its force. This is surprising given the quality of the worldbuilding in An Unkindness of Ghosts (2017), a dystopian tale set on a giant spaceship. The problem isn't that the notion that Vern is part of a secret experiment conducted on Black people is implausible--Solomon references both the Tuskegee Study and the work of James Marion Sims, a 19th-century gynecologist who practiced new techniques on enslaved women. The problem is that the concept that drives the plot for half the novel is barely developed. With almost no evidence, Vern intuits that she is part of a shocking conspiracy, and, from that point, readers are supposed to take this as a given. Instead of building a compelling case, Solomon wrestles fantastic tropes into shapes that fit the frame they've created without effectively supporting it. The fictional universe Solomon constructs here is inadequate to the real-world issues they are exploring.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from April 15, 2021
      Vern is fifteen and pregnant when she escapes from the compound of the Blessed Acres of Cain into the surrounding forest. She gives birth while being hunted by someone--or something--that seems able to locate her with uncanny ease, but manages to remain free. With her twins, Howling and Feral, Vern survives in the woods for years as her body hardens and strengthens far beyond human limitations, though she is also haunted by visions of Cainites past and present. When the hunter resurfaces, the small family is forced to follow a long-cold trail through unknown territory toward someone from Vern's past. Even as they navigate the new wilderness of highways, strangers, and capitalism to find a safe haven, Vern's body continues its slow and painful transformation into a wondrous armored form, capable of amazing feats. With the aid of new allies and an understanding of the truth behind the Blessed Acres of Cain, Vern must confront those responsible for concocting a twisted science experiment in the guise of a religious Black nationalist enclave. Solomon once again stretches the boundaries of speculative fiction in this distinct and visceral exploration of the trauma of Black and queer bodies in an all-too believable near future.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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