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Lord of California

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"A remarkable debut. Valencia writes with a sinuous maturity, a boldness of vision far beyond his years. In Lord of California, this beyond-seeing is literal: wild, impressive, at times menacing invention about what a separatist California might look like begins to look downright prescient, and Valencia's portraitist skill with his characters lifts them off the page, too."—Ryan McIlvain, author of Elders

Set in a future where the United States has dissolved and California is its own independent republic, Lord of California follows the struggles of the Temple family as they work at running a farm on a nationalized land parcel in the central San Joaquin Valley. When the family patriarch, Elliot, dies, it's revealed that he had been keeping five separate families, and in the aftermath of their discovery, his widows and children must come together to keep from losing all they have. But their livelihood is threatened when Elliot's estranged son tries to blackmail them, unleashing a series of violent confrontations between different factions of the family.

A sparse family drama reminiscent of Cormac McCarthy, combined with the intimate first-person narratives of Kazuo Ishiguro, Lord of California is a powerful debut novel.

Andrew Valencia was born in Fresno, California, and graduated with a BA in English from Stanford, where he was awarded a Levinthal Tutorial by the Creative Writing Program. He holds an MFA in fiction from the University of South Carolina, and his work has appeared or is forthcoming in Silk Road Review, the Ploughshares blog, Day One, The Southern Pacific Review, The Fat City Review, Crack the Spine, and other publications.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 23, 2017
      Set in a future California that has declared itself an independent republic following the disbanding of the United States, Valencia’s gritty debut novel chronicles a family’s struggle to survive. The novel is divided into three sections, each told from the viewpoint of a main character: Ellie, one of 12 children born to a bigamist father, five of whose wives and families became aware of each other after his death; Elliot, the estranged older son of a sixth wife previously unknown to the other family members; and Anthony, Ellie’s stepbrother and confidant, whose religious convictions give the tale its moral center. Following their patriarch’s death, the five Temple families band together to secure land in the San Joaquin Valley that they can farm communally to continue their hardscrabble existences. That plan is threatened when Elliot, a coastal elite like his father, contests their property rights, setting in motion a showdown that pits family members against one another. Valencia keeps the focus of his novel intimate, skillfully suggesting a nation in chaos through tensions in the Temple family. His plot takes an unexpected turn in the concluding section, with the burden of the family’s fate falling almost entirely on Ellie and Anthony’s shoulders. It’s not completely convincing, but the prospect of personal redemption at the conclusion is a fine grace note to this bracing, tense tale.

    • Kirkus

      November 15, 2017
      A novel of intricate family relationships and inheritances set in a future in which California is an independent republic following the "disbandment" of the United States.When Elliot Temple dies at the beginning of this novel, he leaves a legacy in shambles, for it turns out he's had five wives and 12 children, each family unit unknown to the others. When the families find out about each other, they get together to try to make sense of the situation and to protect the fragile hold they have on their individual farms. In the Republic of California, land is carefully parceled out, and control of acreage is capped. Elliot's marital manipulations have created a valuable legacy of 100 acres and more. The story is narrated through three points of view, and while all of the narrators are Elliot's children, each conveys a vastly different perspective. Thirteen-year-old Ellie, the first narrator, is wise beyond her years: she actively wonders how they can "begin to build a home out of so many broken pieces." The second narrator is Elliot Jr., a nasty piece of work who tries to manipulate the land situation in his favor. Much of his section is told in flashback, and we get enough glimpses of his father to learn that dad was just as cunning, devious, and vicious as junior. Anthony, the "Mexican" son, narrates the final section. Elliot had wanted Anthony to take a DNA test to prove his paternity and earlier had threatened to kill any child that wasn't his. The narrative becomes unbearably tense as Elliot Jr. tries to blackmail the extended families into forking over the land and thus disrupts their tenuous stability.Vaguely dystopian though ultimately life-affirming, Valencia's novel is an engaging examination of family dynamics and the importance of the legacy of land.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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