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They All Fall the Same, novel by Wes Browne, reviewed by Mary Thorson

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 They All Fall the Same Wes Browne Crooked Lane Books Publication Date: ‎January 7, 2025 Kindle: $14.99/Hardcover $29.99 Burl Spoon’s daughter is missing, and that’s just the start of his troubles. Wes Browne’s new novel, They All Fall the Same , wastes no time immersing us in protagonist Burl Spoon’s life of intimidation, outlaw code, and having the world grasped firmly in his fist, just when that world starts to go to shit. Burl, a Kentucky weed dealer in a state where it’s still illegal, has built a life where he gets whatever he wants, whenever he wants it. We find him as a man now in his mid-50s with an ambitious younger mistress and a longtime wife (Colleen) who is fed-up with his fooling around. He has two adult children, both estranged from their father in their own ways, and a grandchild who is the apple of his eye. His son, Darron, a promising high school basketball prospect came out in college, causing the homophobic Burl to disengage and treat his only son as something...

The Read, fiction by Preston Lang

I t was a party trick. Lila would lay out the Ruffles Barbecue chips with deliberation and speak in a perilous purr, a hypnotic cadence. Her soothsaying came without a hint of parody: an old acquaintance will transform your intellectual outlook; a chance encounter will lead to atypical sensual pleasure. She first did it at a cookout after Rebecca’s ex-boyfriend boasted that he could eat an entire family-sized bag in under two minutes. When he failed, Lila gathered the remains and began to divine the future in the contours and the grease of a chip. After that, Jordan insisted she do it at her keg parties. Jordan liked to get a half barrel of Coors Light, play music from when they were in school, and pretend to be nineteen. At university Lila had been odd and solitary. People found her witchy because she wore loose-fitting, black tops and made herbal tea in the common room microwave. She didn’t like parties or Katy Perry. Instead she listened to Stravinsky on headphones when she wal...

Your Hometown Station: A Vermont Radio Mystery By Nikki Knight

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  You need a local radio station. It could save your life. Anybody who’s ever been sitting in the dark waiting for information, or just a friendly voice from a battery-powered radio can tell you that. What you probably don’t know is the friendly voice on the other end is just as grateful for you. Or that we really save each other. I’d known since the New York hurricanes…but it really hit home during a March ice storm in Vermont. By then, I was no longer a bigtime DJ surrounded by a full staff of production folks -- just one scrambling multitasker at the board: owner, engineer, producer, and talent for the all-request “love songs at night” show. Despite everything I’d survived to end up in the studio that Saturday night, I was a little on edge. Ice storms scare me in a primal way my husband’s cancer, my layoff, and our divorce hadn’t. The sight of those glazed power lines and glistening trees made my gut twist like almost nothing else could. It’s not that I’m a delicate ...