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Hunter's Moon

A Novel in Stories

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

From Philip Caputo—the author of A Rumor of War, The Longest Road, and Some Rise By Sin—comes a captivating mosaic of stories set in a small town where no act is private and the past is never really past.
Hunter's Moon is set in Michigan's wild, starkly beautiful Upper Peninsula, where a cast of recurring characters move into and out of each other's lives, building friendships, facing loss, confronting violence, trying to bury the past or seeking to unearth it. Once-a-year lovers, old high-school buddies on a hunting trip, a college professor and his wayward son, a middle-aged man and his grief-stricken father, come together, break apart, and, if they're fortunate, find a way forward.
Hunter's Moon offers an engaging, insightful look at everyday lives but also a fresh perspective on the way men navigate in today's world.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Veteran character actor Alex Hyde-White delivers just the right down-to-earth Midwest tone in these seven interconnected short stories. They examine the lives of a small group of friends who grew up in the 1960s, went to war, returned, started families and businesses--and suddenly it's twilight, time to look back on their lives. There is a tough realism to these tales of regret, broken vows, and shattered memories. As Hyde-White deftly delivers Caputo's descriptive prose, one has the feeling that these characters aren't quite happy with how things came out and that heading out to the deep woods of Michigan's Upper Peninsula with a bird dog and a gun may be the only sensible option. B.P. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 24, 2019
      Caputo (Some Rise by Sin) probes violent masculinity and intergenerational conflicts, largely against the severe backdrop of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, in this decent but repetitive collection of interlinked stories. Father and sons quarrel viciously in “Grief,” in which a middle-aged Jeffery Havlicek brings his possibly senile father, Hal, on a hunting trip following Hal’s wife’s death, and in “The Nature of Love on the Last Frontier,” in which Paul’s frustrations with Trey, his impetuous son, evaporate in melodramatic brushes with disaster on a hunting trip in Alaska. Haunted Vietnam vet Will Treadwill stars in “Dreamers” as a guide to two Chicago policemen on a bear hunt. Will’s temper turns a tense encounter with younger, volatile Lonnie Kidman into a brutal calamity; a similar impulse in “Lost” leads to his frightening, disoriented night in the woods. “Lines of Departure” stumbles as it veers from pillorying the do-gooders who run the retreat for veterans with PTSD where Will volunteers to honestly recounting the carnage of war. Bed-and-breakfast host Lisa Williams, the only female protagonist, outgrows her once-a-year affair with Gaetan Clyne in “The Guest.” Caputo’s men cloak vulnerability with callousness, but his plots replace emotional growth with the shocks of violence. This collection will appeal to readers looking for a dramatic take on masculinity, though the stories blend together by the end.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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Languages

  • English

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