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Sinkhole, and Other Inexplicable Voids

Stories

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
“These gripping, magical tales span time travel, portals, menacing butterflies, and more. A can’t-miss meditation on families and survival.”
People
“A gorgeous book that also serves as a series of unanswerable, probing questions: How did we get here? How will we move forward? Can we still love, despite the wreckage? This is devastating work, and I mean that as a compliment. Very rarely have I come across a set of stories so genuinely moving. A searing collection that attempts to place the world delicately in our fumbling, undeserving hands.” —Kristen Arnett, New York Times bestselling author of Mostly Dead Things and With Teeth
A MOST ANTICIPATED BOOK OF 2025: Lit Hub, The Millions
What do we owe our family and friends in times of wild uncertainty?

That’s the question the women of Leyna Krow’s beguiling, darkly fabulist story collection grapple with as they strive to be good mothers, daughters, sisters, grandmothers, wives, and companions in a world that is constantly shifting around them. Set in the Pacific Northwest, these stories blend high concept magic with the sometimes subtle, other times glaring, realities of climate change.
As protagonists contend with doppelgänger babies, hordes of time travelers, mysterious portals, and supernatural siblings, there lurks in the background the effects of the region’s rapidly shifting environment. There are wildfires, wind storms, unrelenting heat, disrupted butterfly migration patterns, a new plague, and a catastrophe on the slopes of Mount Rainier that reverberates through three generations of a single family over the course of a half dozen linked stories.
With Krow’s signature blend of sardonic whimsy and unsettling insight, Sinkhole, and Other Inexplicable Voids imagines the rules to be broken, choices to be made, and even crimes to be had for the sake of the people, and places, we love.
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  • Accessibility

    The publisher provides the following statement about the accessibility of the EPUB file supplied to OverDrive. Experiences may vary across reading systems. After borrowing the book, you may download the EPUB files to read in another reading system.

    Summary

    This ebook features mark-up that supports accessibility and enables compatibility with assistive technology. It has been designed to allow display properties to be modified by the reader. The file includes a table of contents, a defined reading order, and ARIA roles to identify key sections and improve the reading experience. A page list and page break locations help readers coordinate with the print edition. Headings allow readers to navigate the ebook quickly by level. Images are well described in conformance with WCAG 2.1 Level AA. Colors meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA contrast standards. There are no hazards.

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    • Appearance of the text and page layout can be modified according to the capabilities of the reading system (font family and font size, spaces between paragraphs, sentences, words, and letters, as well as color of background and text).

    • All content can be read as read aloud speech or dynamic braille.

    • Has alternative text descriptions for images.

    Conformance

    • The publication contains a conformance statement that it meets the EPUB Accessibility and WCAG 2 Level AA standard.

    • The publication was certified by Penguin Random House LLC.

    • This publication claims to meet EPUB Accessibility 1.1 WCAG 2.1 Level AA.

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    • Table of contents to all chapters of the text via links.

    • Elements such as headings, tables, etc for structured navigation.

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    • Page breaks included

    • High contrast between text and background

    • Color is not the sole means of conveying information

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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 18, 2024
      In this trenchant collection from Krow (Fire Season), uncanny moments punctuate the characters’ day-to-day realities. In “The Twin,” a family welcomes the magical and strange appearance of another baby in their son Jace’s crib, and name him Nicholas. The boys appear in other stories, including “Egret,” when their older sister accidentally runs over a puppy and Nicholas, now a teen, attempts to resurrect it. Elsewhere, a female octopus navigates the challenges of dating when the species’ males die after mating (“The Octopus Finds Love at Home”), and twin bank robbers reach the limits of what they can share with each other (“The Sundance Kid Might Have Some Regrets”). In “A Plan to Save Us All,” a series of time travelers descend upon a Pacific Northwest suburb to warn residents of a deadly pathogen that will wipe them all out, but the time travelers turn out to be more interested in getting laid than stopping the virus, and the narrator has sex with many of them. In “Ultraboost Supplements for Good Health,” a group of women agree to test a vitamin one of them has developed, causing them to turn on their husbands, menstruate uncontrollably, and possibly turn into werewolves. Krows’s bracing and curious stories reveal what gets lost in the quest for perfection. Agent: Sarah Bedingfield, Levine Greenberg Rostan.

    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2025
      A book about relationships and environmental uncertainty in the Pacific Northwest. Through an interconnected series of fabulist tales, Krow explores forest fires, volcanoes, time travel, and the lives of octopuses with verve and wit, while also warning of environmental perils to come. In the opener, "The Twin," new parents Troy and Jenna discover a baby identical to their son, Jace, alongside him in his crib, sparking anxiety in Jenna. "What, exactly, was I afraid of?" she wonders. "It is difficult to fear an abstraction." The twin, whom they name Nicholas, along with Jace and their older sister, Ruby, become recurring characters throughout these 16 stories. In "Egret," Ruby, now grown, crashes her car into a fence, killing a neighbor's dog. "Ruby maintained," Krow writes, "that the accident happened not because she was drunk but because she badly needed to pee." Even in the midst of familial or environmental tragedies, Krow's prose maintains a playful spirit. After the dog's death, Nicholas realizes he has the ability to create birds and wildlife; he desperately conjures animals in the aftermath of a forest fire to combat the damage. Krow's writing is at its strongest in moments like this: descriptive, heartfelt, without polemics. When the family members all pile into a big hug, Krow describes them as being "like a geode in a rock, rings in a tree, a nut in the shell--like everything good in nature that comes in layers." Though Ruby and her brothers can't always communicate with each other, they show us that while "seasons seem to be going out of fashion," love is not. A playful yet earnest examination of how people interact with each other and the world.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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