Westward Women by Alice Martin
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Many thanks to Netgalley for the opportunity to read this ARC in exchange for my honest review.
As a lover of dystopian fiction I got really excited about this book! And also, as a current North Carolinian, also excited to read something from one of our own. From the description this seemed right up my alley, especially as someone who once – and perhaps still – suffers from this westward disease, the inexplicable pull toward the what we settler colonialists have always liked to think of as an unexplored “frontier…” (full disclosure: American history is my academic focus, and I’m obsessed with “westward expansion,” which we’ve always romanticized – and which I can assure you is much, much more violent than that).
Well, I’ll tell y’all, I spent the majority of this book waiting for something to happen – it’s a slow burn, but stick with it. The author is talented. I’m pretty sure that this sleepy pace is intentional.
What held me most was the characters themselves, and perhaps that was intentional. The author is fantastic at building out a character and you spend the entire time living in their heads or observing them, trying to figure out whether this westward direction is literal or figurative or both. I am still undecided what to make of it, to be honest. That’s what pushed this from a 3.5 to a 4 for me – I’m still thinking about it.
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Westward Women: A Book Review