TRASHLANDS
Author:
Alison Stine
ISBN:
9780778311270
Publication
Date: October 26, 2021
Publisher:
MIRA Books
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Twitter: @AlisonStine
Instagram: @alistinewrites
Author
Bio:
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Alison Stine is an award-winning poet and author. Recipient of an Individual Artist Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), and an Ohio Arts Council grant, she was a Wallace Stegner Fellow and received the Studs Terkel Award for Media and Journalism. She works as a freelance reporter with The New York Times, writes for The Washington Post, The Atlantic, The Guardian, 100 Days in Appalachia, ELLE, The Kenyon Review, and others, and has been a storyteller on The Moth. After living in Appalachian Ohio for many years, she now lives and writes in Colorado with her partner, her son, and a small orange cat. |
Book
Summary:
A
resonant, visionary novel about the power of art and the sacrifices we are
willing to make for the ones we love
A few generations from now, the coastlines of
the continent have been redrawn by floods and tides. Global powers have agreed
to not produce any new plastics, and what is left has become valuable: garbage
is currency.
In the region-wide junkyard that Appalachia
has become, Coral is a “plucker,” pulling plastic from the rivers and woods.
She’s stuck in Trashlands, a dump named for the strip club at its edge, where
the local women dance for an endless loop of strangers and the club's violent
owner rules as unofficial mayor.
Amid the polluted landscape, Coral works
desperately to save up enough to rescue her child from the recycling factories,
where he is forced to work. In her stolen free hours, she does something that
seems impossible in this place: Coral makes art.
When a reporter from a struggling city on the
coast arrives in Trashlands, Coral is presented with an opportunity to change
her life. But is it possible to choose a future for herself?
Told in shifting perspectives, Trashlands is a beautifully drawn and wildly imaginative tale of a parent's journey, a story of community and humanity in a changed world.
1
Early coralroot
Corallorhiza
trifida
Coral was pregnant then. She hid it well in a
dress she had found in the road, sun-bleached and mud-dotted, only a little
ripped. The dress billowed to her knees, over the tops of her boots. She was
named for the wildflower which hadn’t been seen since before her birth, and for
ocean life, poisoned and gone. It was too dangerous to go to the beach anymore.
You never knew when storms might come.
Though they were
going—to get a whale.
A boy had come from
up north with a rumor: a whale had beached. Far off its course, but everything
was off by then: the waterways, the paths to the ocean, its salt. You went
where you had to go, where weather and work and family—but mostly weather—took
you.
The villagers around
Lake Erie were carving the creature up, taking all the good meat and fat. The
strainer in its mouth could be used for bows, the bones in its chest for tent
poles or greenhouse beams.
It was a lot of fuel
for maybe nothing, a rumor spun by an out-of-breath boy. But there would be
pickings along the road. And there was still gas, expensive but available. So
the group went, led by Mr. Fall. They brought kayaks, lashed to the top of the
bus, but in the end, the water was shallow enough they could wade.
They knew where to go
because they could smell it. You got used to a lot of smells in the world:
rotten food, chemicals, even shit. But death… Death was hard to get used to.
“Masks
up,” Mr. Fall said.
Some
of the men in the group—all men except Coral—had respirators, painter’s masks,
or medical masks. Coral had a handkerchief of faded blue paisley, knotted
around her neck. She pulled it up over her nose. She had dotted it with
lavender oil from a vial, carefully tipping out the little she had left. She
breathed shallowly through fabric and flowers. Mr. Fall just had a T-shirt,
wound around his face. He could have gotten a better mask, Coral knew, but he
was leading the crew. He saved the good things for the others.
She was the only girl
on the trip, and probably the youngest person. Maybe fifteen, she thought. Months
ago, she had lain in the icehouse with her teacher, a man who would not stay.
He was old enough to have an old-fashioned name, Robert, to be called after
people who had lived and died as they should. Old enough to know better, Mr.
Fall had said, but what was better, anymore?
Everything was
temporary. Robert touched her in the straw, the ice blocks sweltering around
them. He let himself want her, or pretend to, for a few hours. She tried not to
miss him. His hands that shook at her buttons would shake in a fire or in a
swell of floodwater. Or maybe violence had killed him.
She remembered it
felt cool in the icehouse, a relief from the outside where heat beat down. The
last of the chillers sputtered out chemicals. The heat stayed trapped in
people’s shelters, like ghosts circling the ceiling. Heat haunted. It would
never leave.
News would stop for
long stretches. The information that reached Scrappalachia would be written
hastily on damp paper, across every scrawled inch. It was always old news.
The whale would be
picked over by the time they reached it.
Mr. Fall led a
practiced team. They would not bother Coral, were trained not to mess with
anything except the mission. They parked the bus in an old lot, then descended
through weeds to the beach. The stairs had washed away. And the beach, when
they reached it, was not covered with dirt or rock as Coral had expected, but
with a fine yellow grit so bright it hurt to look at, a blankness stretching
on.
“Take off your
boots,” Mr. Fall said.
Coral looked at him,
but the others were listening, knot-ting plastic laces around their necks,
stuffing socks into pockets.
“Go on, Coral. It’s
all right.” Mr. Fall’s voice was gentle, muffled by the shirt.
Coral had her job to
do. Only Mr. Fall and the midwife knew for sure she was pregnant, though others
were talking. She knew how to move so that no one could see.
But maybe, she
thought as she leaned on a fence post and popped off her boot, she wanted people to see. To tell her what
to do, how to handle it. Help her. He had to have died, Robert—and that was the
reason he didn’t come back for her. Or maybe he didn’t know about the baby?
People had thought
there would be no more time, but there was. Just different time. Time moving
slower. Time after disaster, when they still had to live.
She set her foot down
on the yellow surface. It was warm. She shot a look at Mr. Fall.
The surface felt
smooth, shifting beneath her toes. Coral slid her foot across, light and
slightly painful. It was the first time she had felt sand.
The sand on the beach
made only a thin layer. People had started to take it. Already, people knew
sand, like everything, could be valuable, could be sold.
Coral took off her
other boot. She didn’t have laces, to tie around her neck. She carried the
boots under her arm. Sand clung to her, pebbles jabbing at her feet. Much of
the trash on the beach had been picked through. What was left was diapers and
food wrappers and cigarettes smoked down to filters.
“Watch yourselves,”
Mr. Fall said.
Down the beach they
followed the smell. It led them on, the sweet rot scent. They came around a
rock outcropping, and there was the whale, massive as a ship run aground: red,
purple, and white. The colors seemed not real. Birds were on it, the black
birds of death. The enemies of scavengers, their competition. Two of the men
ran forward, waving their arms and whooping to scare off the birds.
“All right
everybody,” Mr. Fall said to the others. “You know what to look for.”
Except they didn’t.
Not really. Animals weren’t their specialty.
Plastic was.
People had taken axes
to the carcass, to carve off meat. More desperate people had taken spoons,
whatever they could use to get at something to take home for candle wax or
heating fuel, or to barter or beg for something else, something better.
“You ever seen a
whale?” one of the men, New Orleans, asked Coral.
She shook her head.
“No.”
“This isn’t a whale,”
Mr. Fall said. “Not anymore. Keep your masks on.”
They approached it.
The carcass sunk into the sand. Coral tried not to breathe deeply. Flesh draped
from the bones of the whale. The bones were arched, soaring like buttresses,
things that made up cathedrals—things she had read about in the book.
Bracing his arm over
his mouth, Mr. Fall began to pry at the ribs. They were big and strong. They
made a cracking sound, like a splitting tree.
New Orleans gagged
and fell back.
Other men were dropping.
Coral heard someone vomiting into the sand. The smell was so strong it filled
her head and chest like a sound, a high ringing. She moved closer to give her
feet something to do. She stood in front of the whale and looked into its
gaping mouth.
There was something
in the whale.
Something deep in its
throat.
In one pocket she
carried a knife always, and in the other she had a light: a precious flashlight
that cast a weak beam. She switched it on and swept it over the whale’s tongue,
picked black by the birds.
She saw a mass,
opaque and shimmering, wide enough it blocked the whale’s throat. The whale had
probably died of it, this blockage. The mass looked lumpy, twined with seaweed
and muck, but in the mess, she could make out a water bottle.
It was plastic.
Plastic in the animal’s mouth. It sparked in the beam of her flashlight.
Coral stepped into
the whale.
Excerpted from Trashlands by Alison
Stine, Copyright © 2021 by Alison Stine. Published by
arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.
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