{"id":13356,"date":"2012-09-18T18:09:54","date_gmt":"2012-09-19T00:09:54","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/?p=13356"},"modified":"2018-09-30T12:09:17","modified_gmt":"2018-09-30T18:09:17","slug":"utah-book-award-finalists-maximilian-werners-crooked-creek","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/utah-book-award-finalists-maximilian-werners-crooked-creek\/","title":{"rendered":"Utah Book Award Finalists <br> Maximilian Werner&#8217;s <i>Crooked Creek<\/i>"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>The Utah Center for the Book has announced the finalists for the 2011 Utah Book Award (the date refers to the year of publication rather than then year of the award). Winners will be announced jointly by the Salt Lake City Main Library and the Utah Humanities Council at a program held on October 5th, in conjunction with the Utah Humanities 15th Annual Book Festival. Leading up to that date we will be running reviews of as many of the finalists as possible. A review of one of them, Maximilian Werner&#8217;s <em>Crooked Creek<\/em>, appeared in the July 2011 edition of 15 Bytes, and is included below along with the full list of finalists. Return back here over the next couple of weeks for our takes on the other finalists.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2011 Utah Book Award Finalists<br \/>\n<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Fiction<\/strong><br \/>\n<em>In This Light<\/em> &#8211; Melanie Rae Thon<br \/>\n<em>Crooked Creek<\/em> &#8211; Maximilian Werner<br \/>\n<em>The Glass Harmonica<\/em> &#8211; Dorothee Kocks<\/p>\n<p><strong>Nonfiction<\/strong><br \/>\n<em>The Man Who Never Died<\/em> &#8211; William M. Adler<br \/>\n<em>The Glen Canyon Country<\/em> &#8211; Don D. Fowler<br \/>\n<em>Rainbow Bridge to Monument Valley<\/em> &#8211; Thomas J. Harvey<\/p>\n<p><strong>Poetry<\/strong><br \/>\n<em>Lovely Asunder<\/em> &#8211; Danielle Cadena Deulen<br \/>\n<em>Whitehorn<\/em> &#8211; Jacqueline Osherow<br \/>\n<em>The Goodbye Town<\/em> &#8211; Timothy O&#8217;Keefe<\/p>\n<p><strong>Young Adult<\/strong><br \/>\n<em>How to Save a Life<\/em> &#8211; Sara Zarr<br \/>\n<em>The Predicteds<\/em> &#8211; Christine Seifert<br \/>\n<em>Back When You Were Easier to Love<\/em> &#8211; by Emily Wing Smith<\/p>\n<p><strong>Children\u2019s<\/strong><br \/>\n<em>Scapegoat<\/em> &#8211; Dean Hale and Michael Slack<br \/>\n<em>Tuesdays at the Castle<\/em> &#8211; Jessica Day George<br \/>\n<em>Icefall<\/em> &#8211; Matthew Kirby<\/p>\n<p>______________________________________________<\/p>\n<h4><a href=\"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-content\/uploads\/2012\/09\/crookedcreek.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft size-full wp-image-13366\" title=\"Maximilian Werner's Crooked Creek\" src=\"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-content\/uploads\/2012\/09\/crookedcreek.jpg\" alt=\"Maximilian Werner's Crooked Creek\" width=\"262\" height=\"400\" srcset=\"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-content\/uploads\/2012\/09\/crookedcreek.jpg 327w, https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-content\/uploads\/2012\/09\/crookedcreek-196x300.jpg 196w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 262px) 100vw, 262px\" \/><\/a>Old Moon in the New Moon&#8217;s Arms<\/h4>\n<p>A review of Maximilian Werner&#8217;s <em>Crooked Creek<\/em><br \/>\nby Geoff Wichert<\/p>\n<p>In  his first novel, University of Utah writing professor and essayist  Maximilian Werner ambitiously reconfigures several popular genres,  transfusing them with blood drawn from recent literary fiction. Thus  what may be unwelcome because unfamiliar is made accessible, a process  that works in both directions. In historical order\u2014and increasing  intimacy\u2014his models include the Western, historical fiction set in Utah  in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and the memoir of  self-discovery through a close encounter with nature. <em>Crooked Creek<\/em> contains epic elements, including gunfights, burials, grave robbing,  struggles between competing visions of a wide open future, religious  ideology, and encounters with ghosts and guilt. Yet it never ascends to  the airy realm of myth. Rather, it roots itself in specific sensual  experiences and almost entirely resists exposition: things aren\u2019t  explained to us, they\u2019re just shown. Its events, while imagined anew,  are based in true accounts the author researched personally. In this  way, and by combining the evocative power of often archaic speech with  the specificity of scientific prose, Maximilian Werner makes this brief  account of three generations of Utah immigrants compelling for those of  us who still dwell, inescapably, in the world they set in motion. To  borrow a poetic and evocative meteorological phrase from one of his  characters, Werner gives us the old moon in the new moon\u2019s arms.<\/p>\n<p>As they must, the characteristics that make <em>Crooked Creek<\/em> a compelling read appear as  it opens:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>After the rain had quit, the boy left the aspens, under  which he sat with a shotgun and a nearly headless rabbit, and he strode  through a field of alfalfa that wet him to his belt. Slung with a length  of twine, the rabbit swung side to side over his shoulder. In the cool  air, barn swallows gave way to bats as the dark bloomed. All about him  the grass was pocked with horse droppings, and a coyote\u2019s howls drifted  across the weeds and through the air to where the boy laid out the  rabbit, and with his eyes and feet he hunted for wood in the outlying  darkness.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>There are no  mere birds here; instead, there are Red-wing  Blackbirds and Western Tanagers, which appear in season along with  pomace flies and hound\u2019s tongue. \u2018Rabbit\u2018 is an adequate description of  dinner, but hundreds of living things are observed with the precision  necessary for survival and a genuine sense of the sacred. Only the mutts  that dwell on the fringes of human space are not precisely delineated,  no doubt because they, like their necessarily freewheeling masters,  can\u2019t be. Meanwhile, unlike romances\u2014Hollywood or Harlequin\u2014where one  emerges from shelter to find a cozy lawn, here horse droppings and a  wild cry lend visual and auditory forms that becomes tactile as well  when a reader recalls searching with feet for what lies out of sight.  Descriptions range from the functional to the poetic, and even  well-informed readers will enjoy having a dictionary and guidebook to  local flora and fauna at hand.<\/p>\n<p>The boy on whom <em>Crooked Creek<\/em> opens is the grandson of  characters only met later. Some readers may be frustrated by the almost  profligate way the novel picks up and abandons characters and story  lines, while others will feel that we see just enough of the inevitable  low-lifes and bullies who are irresistibly drawn to the fringes of  civilization. The tapestry Werner weaves of them is a relatively small  textile that leaves room for elaboration, one hopes on a larger scale.  Werner\u2019s interests arguably lie elsewhere, with a larger realignment of  how we remember and retell specific stories of our origins. He suggests  that the story of Zion\u2019s founding, full of invisible beings and larger,  pre-ordained purposes, has obscured a more compelling and meaningful  tale. Those who come across his book after finding nothing new on the  Religious Fiction shelf at the bookstore will either be disappointed or  forced to expand their horizons.<\/p>\n<p>We can readily imagine how the religious revival that \u2018burned over\u2019 the  northeastern states at the beginning of the 19th century was motivated  in part by the propinquity of death in times and circumstances where  most people lived at a distance from what was, in any event, primitive  health care. Then as now, each person died only once, but unlike now,  when the first death witnessed up close may well be ones own, those who  survived infancy then saw a great deal of death. Intervening decades  have pushed mortality back, technically by changes in medicine and  lifestyle, but also philosophically away from consciousness by the  collision of materialistic and spiritual modes of thought. In <em>Crooked Creek<\/em> Werner clearly wants to recover for contemplation some of the most  basic facts about how we live and die. There\u2019s death here, some talking  and a lot of thinking about it. Religion isn\u2019t the answer to the  awareness of death: it\u2019s a product of immoveable fact.<\/p>\n<p>Near the middle of <em>Crooked Creek<\/em>, Neff Saunders, a Heber Valley  settler concerned with the impact of cattle on fragile desert land,  calls his rancher neighbor\u2019s attention to the destruction his livestock  have wreaked to their common stream:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Allred\u2019s face looked stern then and the veins on either side  of his neck rose and fell with each heart beat. Up to that time, he had  practiced a detached civility toward Neff, as though he were being  tolerated and nothing more, which is how it was with the Gentiles that  could not be reached by the missionaries and the townspeople with their  promises of heaven, eternal life and, in the meanwhile, fertile women,  blessed bread and honey.<br \/>\nBut now Neff knew he was seeing Allred for what he was, a man who had  been dwelling on eternity for so long, he could not feel his feet on the  ground.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>This moment of inevitable, historically pervasive agrarian  conflict is as close as Werner comes to taking up any specific doctrine.  Instead, he retells the settlement saga without the subtext of  otherworldly actors, purposes, and meanings that muddies recent accounts  as much as, say, Manifest Destiny did earlier ones. Allred the neighbor  is a recurring presence, of course, and the only specifically Mormon  character in<em> Crooked Creek<\/em>, but he is impeccably observed and  there is nothing necessarily Mormon in his abrupt manner or lack of  foresight. Risking a different controversy, <em>Crooked Creek<\/em> portrays Native Americans\u2014in particular the Ute Indians\u2014as vanished  exemplars of a more harmonious, not to anachronistically call it a more  \u2018ecological,\u2019 relationship with nature. This may upset readers who fall  to one side or the other of current historical or scientific  understanding, especially if they forget that ultimately they are  confronting not those facts, but popular (and unpopular) opinions  current more than a century ago. In an afterword, the publishers point  out that not only do we have more information today, but evidence from a  century of management policy that Neff and Allred did not share.<\/p>\n<p>The story of <em>Crooked Creek<\/em> is told in one long flashback.  Starting at a point where the plot is well developed\u2014usually as close as  practical to its end\u2014is a staple of genre entertainments that rely on  focused curiosity to keep the pages turning. But here the familiar  structure serves an aesthetic purpose as well. The cyclical rhythm it  gives the plot emphasizes the storyteller\u2019s point that each generation  lives, as it must, as if it were doing so for the first time. By opening  when and where it does, it does something that only art can do: brings  the latest generation, the adolescents Gil and Cider, into close  proximity with their parents, Preston and Sara, when they were about the  same age and still under the sway of her parents, Ben and Mary. Without  resorting to a diagram, this is the way to establish common points and  departures between the three generations. It\u2019s not giving away too much  to say that after a period of wandering, a need arises to settle  down\u2014but putting down roots involves sacrifices and compromises similar  to those that formerly drove two families to pull up stakes, and no  degree of attachment ever quite cancels out the urge to move on. Also,  real life isn\u2019t a staged drama with beginning and concluding acts. Birth  and death just turn the lights on and off, while the story goes on . . .  if necessary, in the dark.<\/p>\n<p>Living as they did on the trail, or in structures they built themselves,  the Wood, Allred, and Fisher families lived much closer to nature than  we can grasp. Living without plumbing or electricity or any form of  communication not requiring someone to travel to the other\u2019s location  made them more dependent on personal encounters. This makes intimacy, in  the broadest sense, a compelling component and theme of <em>Crooked Creek<\/em>.  Early on, readers watch as one of her sons gives an ailing woman a  bath. Later we will see how she had always put practicality before false  modesty, but during this first encounter we know only what we bring to  the novel and how that contrasts with the one witness in the book, in  whose hands it becomes the novel\u2019s first major turning point. It would  be a pleasure to describe the tenderness felt in the moment, but the  truth is that\u2019s not how it happens. It\u2019s a powerful scene, but its magic  comes from the brusque efficiency with which he does what\u2019s needed. In a  story where it often feels the characters live close to their land but  as far from each other as possible, it\u2019s stunning to realize that it\u2019s  in moments like the changing of a diaper that our first and strongest  bonds are formed. How we behave then reveals who we are, and stamps it  as an existential fact on those we touch.<\/p>\n<p>In <em>Crooked Creek<\/em> Maximilian Werner has encoded the sources of  beauty and terror, which is what art is supposed to do. But more than  that, he has restored an arguably proper balance between competing  desires, like the desire to be given the answers and the desire to see  for ourselves. We want to know what it was like for those for whom it  was different than it is for us, and he makes as much of the answer as  can be known come vividly to life. Yet we also want to know that for  everyone, even those far away in time and space, enough is the same as  it is for us that we can presume to stand with them. <em>Crooked Creek<\/em> has its cinematic moments, and a few minor anachronisms, but it also  captures the poetry of life emerging out from death, taking its meaning  therefrom, and returning to go around again.<br \/>\n<em><br \/>\nCrooked Creek is published by <a href=\"http:\/\/torreyhouse.com\/\" target=\"_blank\">Torrey House Press<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><iframe src=\"http:\/\/rcm.amazon.com\/e\/cm?t=artistsofutah-20&#038;o=1&#038;p=8&#038;l=as1&#038;asins=193722600X&#038;ref=tf_til&#038;fc1=000000&#038;IS2=1&#038;lt1=_blank&#038;m=amazon&#038;lc1=0000FF&#038;bc1=000000&#038;bg1=FFFFFF&#038;f=ifr\" style=\"width:120px;height:240px;\" scrolling=\"no\" marginwidth=\"0\" marginheight=\"0\" frameborder=\"0\"><\/iframe><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Utah Center for the Book has announced the finalists for the 2011 Utah Book Award (the date refers to the year of publication rather than then year of the award). Winners will be announced jointly by the Salt Lake City Main Library and the Utah Humanities Council [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":847,"featured_media":13366,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_piecal_is_event":false,"_piecal_start_date":"","_piecal_end_date":"","_piecal_is_allday":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[30,69,35],"tags":[321,1061],"class_list":["post-13356","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-book-reviews","category-daily-bytes","category-literary-arts","tag-maximilian-werner","tag-torrey-house-press"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-content\/uploads\/2012\/09\/crookedcreek.jpg","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_likes_enabled":true,"publishpress_future_action":{"enabled":false,"date":"2026-07-03 08:54:45","action":"change-status","newStatus":"draft","terms":[],"taxonomy":"category","extraData":[]},"publishpress_future_workflow_manual_trigger":{"enabledWorkflows":[]},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/13356","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/847"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=13356"}],"version-history":[{"count":13,"href":"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/13356\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":35612,"href":"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/13356\/revisions\/35612"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/13366"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=13356"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=13356"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/artistsofutah.org\/15Bytes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=13356"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}