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Journeyman

A Novel

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
From the author of The Dogfighter, hailed by Geoff Dyer as “the most exciting debut…by an American writer since Eugenides’s The Virgin Suicides,” comes Journeyman, a tightly wound novel about dwelling, building, belonging, love, and the value of a place to call home. Nolan Jackson is a journeyman carpenter by trade and a wanderer by nature. Set in 2007, while fellow Americans fight in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, Nolan builds tract homes across California, travelling between jobs. Following a shocking workplace accident in his temporary home of Las Vegas, he uproots himself from the tentative relationships he has made and heads west towards the ocean.
On his way he passes through his brother's town where circumstances force him to stay put. Bereft of his trailer and his tools, Nolan turns to the task of building the foundations of a meaningful life. The specter of war and questions of the Western-film notions of masculinity are woven throughout the novel; from the damage to Nolan’s family by the Vietnam War in which his father fought, to the ubiquity and consequence of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, to slow unraveling of his brother’s marriage and mental state, to the mysterious series of arsons being set around their small town.
Ultimately, Journeyman is an important, timely novel about men and brothers finding their way in the 21st century West.
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    • Kirkus

      December 1, 2016
      A rootless carpenter searches for home in Bojanowksi's second novel (The Dog Fighter, 2004).After witnessing a serious accident on the job, journeyman carpenter Nolan Jackson ditches Las Vegas, leaving behind a promising, if casual, relationship with dental hygiene student Linda, to head west. A second accident--this one involving his Airstream trailer--forces Nolan, 31, to take up residence with his semiestranged older brother, Chance, now living beyond his means in a small town in Sonoma County. Whereas Nolan is a stoic (and serial) wanderer in a Western hat, his disheveled brother is a conspiracy-minded journalist who has long operated under the name Cosmo Swift. Cosmo, it's quickly apparent, is losing it: his wife has left him, and he spends his days hammering away on his computer, "extrapolating the geopolitical ramifications of an obscure naval battle" between Russia and Japan in 1905. Meanwhile, someone has taken to burning down old houses in the town, and Nolan worries Cosmo may have something to do with it. Bojanowski aims high here. The story is set in 2007, during the U.S.'s dual engagements in Afghanistan and Iraq, and Nolan's decision not to enlist, despite his father's service in Vietnam, weighs heavily on him. A bevy of well-rendered secondary characters brings humor and heart to the proceedings. Ultimately, though, the parts here don't add up to a satisfying whole. While Nolan makes a fine protagonist, Cosmo is allowed too much real estate to ramble, and Linda, given her ultimate significance to the plot, is underwritten. Meanwhile, the ending may strike readers as too tidy, a maudlin coda to a story that is otherwise admirably complex. Bojanowski's novel is layered and thoughtful but aspires to heights it doesn't quite reach.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      February 1, 2017
      Bojanowski's follow-up to The Dog Fighter (2014) tells the story of Nolan Jackson, a journeyman carpenter and itinerant do-it-yourself philosopher. He witnesses a horrific accident while on a construction site and flees Las Vegas for the Pacific Ocean. Following up on a promise to his mother, he stops in Valley Oaks, California, to visit his older brother, Chance, a journalist covering a string of arson attacks in town after his wife abruptly walked out on him. Circumstances keep Nolan there for a while, and he finds that he must figure out how to stand still and open his heart, probably for the first time since his father died years before. Bojanowski employs prose best described as masculine as he portrays Nolan as broken down, then rebuilt. Sometimes I think about all the places I've been, carpenter Nolan observes, all the walls I've raised. No one knows it was me except the guys I worked alongside. Journeyman is a textured, deceptively linear novel that throws some curves and carries a trace of Cormac McCarthy.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)

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