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Binding: Paperback
ISBN: 978-1-57131-036-1
Pages: 148
Publish Date: Dec, 2001
Genre: Fiction
Hell's Bottom, Colorado
On Hells Bottom Ranch, a section of land below the Front Range, there are women like Renny who prefer alittle Hell swirled with their Heaven" and men like Ben, her husband, whosgotten used to smoothing over Rennys excesses." There is a daughter who maybe plays it too safe and a daughter plagued by onlyhalf-wanting" what life has to offer. The ranch has been the site of births and deaths of both cattle and children, as well as moments of amazing harmony and clear vision.
Hells Bottom, Colorado won the Milkweed National Fiction Prize and the 2002 PEN USA Award for Fiction.
“Laura Pritchett's stories are beautifully written and unsparingly clear-eyed, and an unsettling as a hot summer wind. These stories are among the best I've read at depicting the everyday struggles of men, women, and, especially children to reconcile nature's beauty with its all-too-casual cruelties.”
—Alison Baker, author of How I Came West, and Why I Stayed and Loving Wanda Beaver“A collection of well-crafted stories . . . [that] jump back and forth in time, but their message is clear: this family's ties are as quixotic, fierce, and enduring as the land that binds them together. Teens will find this a moving portrait of the American West and what it takes to eke out a living from land that is as harsh as it is beautiful."
—School Library Journal“Pritchett portrays human cruelty on the margins of decency and, conversely, human kindness on the margins of survival: Each story pivots on one of these points. . . . The interlocking stories allow a reader to see incidents from many angles. They ricochet like bullets off Renny and Ben's family tree. They are jarring, deeply violent; the fates they hold seem unavoidable.”
—LA Times“With the rugged beauty of the Rocky Mountains as backdrop, Pritchett's spare yet richly evocative stories portray the stark reality of life on a Colorado cattle ranch, where three generations of one family tend the land and animals, devoting and losing themselves to an existence few would understand or choose to follow. Through love and loss, Pritchett excels at juxtaposing the sensuous with the severe, the rapturous with the repugnant.”
—Carol Haggas, Booklist“Vividly conveys a world where decency and humanity are challenged repeatedly, and diminished, yet still manage to gain small, significant victories. . . . An intimacy and warmth in character and a knowing view of the land are great strengths here: an impressive small-scale study of family dynamics.”
—Kirkus Reviews






