The Desert Sky Before Us: A Novel
Written by Anne Valente
Narrated by Cassandra Campbell
4/5
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About this audiobook
""The Desert Sky Before Us is a marvel. A vital, profound story of the aftermath of loss, and of the terrors and illuminations of love."" —R.O. Kwon, author of The Incendiaries
From award-winning author Anne Valente comes this poignant and unforgettable literary novel of two estranged sisters—one, a former racecar driver and the other a recently-released prisoner—who embark on a road trip together to complete the scavenger hunt their mother designed for them before her death.
When Billie is released from a correctional facility in Decatur, her sister Rhiannon is there to meet her, even though the two haven’t seen each other in months. Painful secrets and numerous unspoken betrayals linger between them—but most agonizing is the sudden passing of their mother, a renowned paleontologist.
Rhiannon and Billie must overcome their differences as they set off on a road trip west, following the breadcrumb-trail of their late mother’s scavenger hunt, a sort of second funeral she planned in her final days. The sisters know the trail will end in Utah at the famous Cleveland-Lloyd Quarry, where their mother spent her career researching dinosaur fossils. But the seemingly endless days on the road soon take their toll, forcing Rhiannon and Billie to confront their hostilities and revisit old memories—both good and bad.
As they travel across the heart of America, and as a series of plane crashes in the news make their journey all the more urgent, the two sisters begin to rediscover each other and to uncover their late mother’s veiled second life, taking them on an unexpected emotional journey inward—and forcing them to come to terms with their own choices in life.
Anne Valente
Anne Valente’s first short-story collection, By Light We Knew Our Names, won the Dzanc Books Short Story Prize. Her fiction appears in One Story, The Kenyon Review, The Southern Review, and the Chicago Tribune, and her essays appear in The Believer and the Washington Post. Originally from St. Louis, she teaches creative writing and literature at Hamilton College.
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Reviews for The Desert Sky Before Us
2 ratings1 review
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5We drive a lot in this family. 16 hours or so each way every summer. We don't head west; we head north. But the destination is almost unimportant. The monotony, the quiet time inside your own head, the conversation with fellow passengers not face to face but side by side as the miles unspool under the tires their own importance. There is something sacred, something hypnotic in long drives. How much more would it be if there were wounds to heal, futures to try to find, and a past to reconcile like there is in Anne Valente's hypnotic new novel, The Desert Sky Before Us?Rhiannon and Billie are sisters whose paleontologist mother has recently died. Only Rhiannon could attend her funeral because Billie was in prison, finishing a 6 year sentence for setting the library she worked in on fire. Knowing she was dying, their mother arranged for a second funeral so that Billie could attend, one far from their Illinois home, at the Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry in Utah where Margaret Hurst spent the bulk of her professional career. All over the world, planes have been falling out of the sky, likely because of climate change, and knowing this, she devised a long driving road trip for her daughters, giving them the gift of time together to overcome their estrangement, to learn more about who she was, and to look into themselves to discover who they once were, who they are now, and who they want to be. Rhiannon was once a promising race car driver but now sells textbooks. Her long term relationship with her girlfriend has fallen apart and she is completely emotionally shut off, as she has been for so long. Billie is free of prison but not of the past, the abuse she suffered at the hands of her boyfriend, the loss of the red tailed hawk she once trained, and she is bottled up with rage and hurt. Spending time in a car with her older sister, traveling to each point of their mother's planned journey will test them both.Both Rhiannon and Billie are lost characters. Each of them used to have a passion and a purpose but they've both lost them and it remains to be seen if their late mother can help them recover either. They are damaged in their own ways, poor communicators, and so used to stifling their emotions that cracking open and laying themselves bare will be the hardest part of their journey, far harder than the multiple days they'll spend crisscrossing the West toward the final memorial site for their mother. There are no big plot climaxes here but there is a humming background tension threading through an emotional exploration. There is a starkness to the land and landscape the women are driving through, but beauty and infinity too, mirroring their hearts as they uncover themselves within the context of their relationship to each other and to their family, reduced as it may now be, as a whole. The fossils of their mother's career, the artifacts from her life that she left them to find, can only tell them so much, still holding secrets and uncertainties, perhaps to be uncovered one day, perhaps not. This is beautifully written, a warning, haunting and aching. Readers who prize tender character development and who wonder at the slow, painful, messy revelation of real relationship and understanding will find much to appreciate here.