Jim Lynch Border Songs
A Northwest author takes readers north of the border, up Canada way.
March 10th, 2010
Anthony Brandt The Man Who Ate His Boots | To boldly go where no scurvy-ridden, candle-eating man has gone before.1 comment
March 3rd, 2010
Mary Gaitskill Don’t Cry | Tales from the bloody, disembodied heart.0 comments
February 17th, 2010
Jake Adelstein Tokyo Vice | Of gaijin, gangsters and geisha.0 comments
February 3rd, 2010
Wells Tower Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned | Stories to pillage by.0 comments
January 27th, 2010
Q & A • Nick Flynn The Ticking Is The Bomb | Torture ticks him off while his daughter’s on the way.0 comments
January 20th, 2010
Elizabeth Gilbert Committed | The bother of being the bride.0 comments
January 13th, 2010
The Neverending Story | Various bits of information about the Moth.0 comments
January 6th, 2010
William Langewiesche Fly By Wire0 comments
December 30th, 2009
Matthew Flaming The Kingdom of Ohio | The secret, sordid origins of...Toledo?0 comments
December 9th, 2009
Profile: Jay Ryan | Meet the king of warm-and-fuzzy rock posters.1 comment
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[June 24th, 2009]
At one point in Jim Lynch’s new novel, an elderly cancer patient is mistaken for a terrorist after the radiation therapy he’s just received sets off a detector at the U.S. Border Patrol.
Border Songs (Knopf, 291 pages, $25.95), which chronicles the war on drugs and terror along the U.S.-Canadian border, is full of such episodes, which seem to argue that life in the Land of the Free, post 9/11, is getting a little less free than before. Then again, when has common sense ever silenced the howl of the anti-immigration mob?
Severely dyslexic at 6 feet 8 inches tall, Brandon Vanderkool immediately strikes onlookers as an unlikely Border Patrol agent. As he polices 30 miles of the invisible boundary between British Columbia and Washington, Brandon is more interested in counting bird species and crafting Andy Goldsworthy-style works of art than in catching drug smugglers or illegal immigrants. In spite of this, he proves a natural at the job—a “shit magnet,” in the words of his fellow agents—who racks up arrests almost as fast as he collects bird sightings.
Border Songs is set into fast motion when a half-drunk, off-duty Brandon runs a Pontiac off the road in an unauthorized high-speed chase. He thinks his career with the Border Patrol is over, but he’s lucked into another big drug bust. Unconscious behind the wheel of the wrecked Pontiac lies a suspected Algerian terrorist, not to mention bales of marijuana and plastic explosives in the trunk. From there, security measures along the U.S.-Canada border assume hysterical proportions, pitting smugglers against feds, and leaving farmers and townspeople caught in the crossfire.
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Lynch’s debut novel, The Highest Tide, crept up on readers like a sneaker wave, unfolding a warm coming-of-age tale against the dazzling backdrop of Puget Sound’s rich marine ecosystem. Border Songs is equally tender and heartfelt, but indisputably a more nuanced book, a sort of Empire Falls along the 49th parallel where failing farms and sleepy towns are being crowded out by tribal casinos and upscale subdivisions. It’s a fascinatingly close look at the confluence of small-town life, the global drug trade and illegal immigration, and it places Jim Lynch at the forefront of Northwest writers to watch.
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