Drop City

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Overview

It is 1970, and a down-at-the-heels California commune devoted to peace, free love, and the simple life has decided to relocate to the last frontier ' the unforgiving landscape of interior Alaska ' in the ultimate expression of going back to the land. Armed with the spirit of adventure and na ' ve optimism, the inhabitants of ' Drop City ' arrive in the wilderness of Alaska only to find their utopia already populated by other young homesteaders. When the two communities collide, unexpected friendships and dangerous enmities are born as everyone struggles with the bare essentials of life: love, nourishment, and a roof over one ' s head. Rich, allusive, and unsentimental, T.C. Boyle ' s ninth novel is a tour de force infused with the lyricism and take-no-prisoners storytelling for which he is justly famous.

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Author Information

Bio of T. Coraghessan Boyle

T. Coraghessan Boyle is the acclaimed author of eleven novels, including The Tortilla Curtain, winner of the PEN/Faulkner Award, and Drop City, a New York Times bestseller and finalist for the National Book Award. He has also published eight collections of stories, including, most recently, Tooth and Claw. He lives near Santa Barbara, California. .

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Additional Info

Imprint

Penguin Group, Inc.

Filesize

532.78 KB

Number of Pages

512

eBook ISBN

9780786570966

Excerpt from: Drop City by T. Coraghessan Boyle

The morning was a fish in a net, glistening and wriggling at the dead black border of her consciousness, but she'd never caught a fish in a net or on a hook either, so she couldn't really say if or how or why. The morning was a fish in a net. That was what she told herself over and over, making a little chant of it a mantra as she decapitated weeds with the guillotine of her hoe, milked the slit-eyed goats and sat down to somebody's idea of porridge in the big drafty meeting room, where sixty shimmering communicants sucked at spoons and worked their jaws.

Outside was the California sun, making a statement in the dust and saying something like ten o'clock or ten-thirty to the outbuildings and the trees. There were voices all around her, laughter, morning pleasantries and animadversions, but she was floating still and just opened up a million-kilowatt smile and took her ceramic bowl with the nuts and seeds and raisins and the dollop of pasty oatmeal afloat in goat's milk and drifted through the door and out into the yard to perch on a stump and feel the hot dust invade the spaces between her toes. Eating wasn't a private act nothing was private at Drop City but there were no dorm mothers here, no social directors or parents or bosses, and for once she felt like doing her own thing. Grooving, right? Wasn't that what this was all about? The California sun on your face, no games, no plastic society just freedom and like minds, brothers and sisters all?

Star Paulette Regina Starr, her name and being shrunk down to four essential letters now had been at Drop City for something like three weeks. Something like. In truth, she couldn't have said exactly how long she'd been sleeping on a particular mattress in a particular room with a careless warm slew of non-particular people, nor would she have cared to. She wasn't counting days or weeks or months or even years. Or eons either. Big Bang. Who created the universe? God created the universe. The morning is a fish in a net. Wasn't it a Tuesday when they got here? Tuesday was music night, and today today was Friday. She knew that much from the buzz around the stewpot in the kitchen the weekend hippies were on their way, and the gawkers and gapers too but time wasn't really one of her hangups, as she'd demonstrated for all and sundry by giving her Tissot watch with the gold-link wristband to an Indian kid in Taos, and he wasn't even staring at her or looking for a handout, just standing there at the bus stop with his hand clenched in his mother's. "Here," she said, "here," twisting it off her wrist, "you want this?" She'd never been west before, never seen anything like it, and there he was, black bangs shielding his black eyes, a little deep-dwelling Indian kid, and she had to give him something. The hills screamed with cactus. The fumes of the bus rode up her nose and made her eyes water.