WE COME TO OUR SENSES
For readers of Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk and Redeployment, a searing debut exploring the lives of veterans returning to their homes in the South. Lacerating and lyrical, We Come to Our Senses centers on men and women affected by combat directly and tangentially, and the peculiar legacies of war. The story “Evie M.” is about a vet turned office clerk whose petty neuroses derail even her suicide; in “We Come to Our Senses,” a hip young couple leaves the city for the sticks, trading film festivals for firearms; in “Colleen” a woman redeploys to her Mississippi hometown, and confronts the superior who abused her at war; and in “11/19/98” a couple obsesses over sitcoms and retail catalogs, extracting joy and deeper meaning. The story “Hers” is about the sexual politics of a combat zone.
REVIEWS/FEATURES
New York Times Book Review
Los Angeles Review of Books
Chicago Review of Books
Electric Literature's Best of 2016
Austin American Statesman
Tennessean/Portfolio
Chapter 16/News Sentinel/Commercial Appeal/Nashville Scene
Military Times' Best of 2016
Kirkus (Starred Review)
No Depression
Charlotte Observer
Publisher's Weekly
The Tennessean
The Rumpus
The Common
OUT
Time Now
Full Stop
Booklist (Starred Review)
Book Riot "100 Must-Read Contemporary Short Story Collections"
Endorsements
I read Odie Lindsey’s We Come to Our Senses in a way that books rarely compel me to… Not only compulsively readable, the thoughts these war stories stirred were rich and complex and heartening in their universal humanity. This is a remarkable collection by a splendid new writer.
Robert Olen Butler, Pulitzer Prize-winner and author of A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain
With a searing insightfulness and a dark humor all his own, Odie Lindsey holds up a powerful lens to an experience of modern American warfare that has been largely ignored in fiction—that of female veterans. This is collection about how the battles we wage with the external world are really only half the fight.
Bonnie Jo Campbell, National Book Award Finalist and author of Once Upon a River
Here’s an exciting, even thrilling new voice I’m delighted to read, to hear in my head. He’s got all the notes, he’s all in. Odie Lindsey’s a terrific writer—pitch-perfect, entirely under control at high speed—who doesn’t hold anything back.
Brad Watson, National Book Award finalist and author of Aliens in the Prime of Their Lives
The debut we hope for: heart-quickening, kinetic, relentless in its engagement with our time.
Paul Yoon, author of Snow Hunters
[A] gritty and ambitious debut collection…Odie Lindsey is an innovative and consummate prose stylist.
Mary Miller, author of The Last Days of California
The writing here is nuanced, correct, and felt enough that, for once, ‘Support Our Troops’ is not political pablum. One might say that in Odie Lindsey’s care ‘Support Our Troops’ is a literary imperative.
Padgett Powell, author of Cries for Help, Various
Brutal, precise, like a bullet to the heart, Lindsey’s prose is exactly right for conveying what war does to the human soul. Whether comic or tragic, the characters in these stories feel so vibratingly alive they seem to be whispering directly into your ear.
Helen Benedict, author of Sand Queen and The Lonely Soldier