
Yesterday I read through Davy Rothbart’s The Lone Surfer of Montana, Kansas and had my heart broken, lit up and left dizzy. It was everything I had hoped for from the creator of Found Magazine; the stories collected in Davy’s first book resonate with those same emotive vibrations that Found conjured with its collected lost pieces of lives. Though this was fiction, the stories were so raw, real, strange and beautiful that they might as well be the stories of our neighbours.
There were many moments in the stories I was moved deeply by. The first time I had to stop and wonder for a second if he’d been seeing into my own life was in “A Black Dog,” during which I had to scramble to jot down “77” so that I could return to one passage that reminded me of my own experiences so eerily I couldn’t shake the feeling.
And so it went through the rest of the book, culminating in “Elena,” a gritty, wrenching, ugly and at times tender story of a young man tied up in low organized crime across the US and Mexican border, with beatings, prostitution and theft in contrast and entangled with a sweet young girl and the children she cared for.
Don’t skip the precious few hours of these raw and beautiful stories. The reward for me was so great that I would rank it as the most densely pleasing and moving read I’ve had this year. If any book can reveal the inner turmoil and hope of America in 162 pages, this is it.
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3 comments on “The Lone Surfer of Montana, Kansas”
Can I please borrow the book? It sounds absolutely fantastic!!
Also fantastic is my little nephew Alex. He is so beautiful, and so charming and adorable it is fabulous. I LOVE him!
You’re welcome to the book whenever you’d like. π
I’m glad you’ve been enjoying seeing Alex. π
As soon as I finally manage to get back home (which will hopefully be tomorrow or the next day) then I will borrow the book π
There is something wonderful about sitting in a hammock with a baby staring at the trees π