Annie and the wolves

Andromeda Romano-Lax, 1970-

Book - 2021

"Annie Oakley's Wild West Americana and time travel come together in this genre-defying novel that explores trauma and the cost of female revenge. Ruth McClintock is obsessed with the past. For nearly a decade, she has been studying Annie Oakley, convinced that the legendary sharpshooter experienced a scarring event in adolescence that led her to fight for the right of every American woman to own and operate a gun. This fruitless search has cost Ruth her doctorate, a book deal, and her fiancé. But Ruth may finally have the evidence she is looking for. She has managed to hunt down a journal purporting to be a "true account" of Oakley's midlife struggles, including secret visits to psychologist Josef Breuer and the d...esire for vengeance against the "Wolves," or the men who have wronged her. With the help of Reece, a tech-savvy senior at the local high school, Ruth attempts to establish the journal's provenance, but she begins to have out-of-body episodes that she soon believes to be time travel, taking her through Annie's lived experiences. As she solves Annie's mysteries, she also confronts her own, from the reasons behind her teenage sister's suicide to visions of a tragedy in her Minnesota town that she might be able to prevent"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographical fiction
Science fiction
Historical fiction
Time-travel fiction
Western fiction
Published
New York : Soho [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Andromeda Romano-Lax, 1970- (author)
Physical Description
398 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781641291699
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Daring and imaginative Romano-Lax (Plum Rains, 2018) puts another provocative spin on historical fiction as she has both Ruth McClintock, a struggling small-town Minnesota historian, and her obsession, sharpshooter Annie Oakley, take turns narrating in this highly original time-warping tale. Ruth was working on a book about Oakley until a car crash leaves her with a brain injury, a trauma echoing the train wreck that changed everything for Annie. In spite of falling into inexplicable trances and breaking up with her fiancé, Ruth persists in searching for evidence of the sexual abuse she believes young Annie endured, which catalyzed her mission to help women defend themselves. When Ruth receives an old journal that seems to document Annie's work with a psychoanalyst in Vienna, she also acquires an unexpected ally, Reece, a tech-smart, sensitive, briefly suicidal senior at the high school where Ruth's ex-fiancé teaches, and their bond pulls in Caleb, another deeply troubled student who discovers the tragic truth about the death of Ruth's sister. As she illuminates Oakley's extraordinary life, Romano-Lax conjures supernatural dimensions in pursuit of psychological revelations, grapples with the sexual predation of "wolves" and the muzzle of shame, and dramatizes the slipperiness of memory and history, creating a compassionate, heady, and witty whirl of fact and insight, mesmerizing characters and suspenseful predicaments..

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Romano-Lax follows Plum Rains with an engrossing work of speculative fiction featuring a time-traveling Annie Oakley. Failed doctoral candidate Ruth McClintock is working to prove her theory that Oakley was sexually abused by a man Oakley's parents sent her to work for as a child. Aided in her research by high school student Reece, Ruth discovers her neighbor, a cheerleading coach at the school, has been raping students, making him a modern-day "Wolf"--Oakley's name for predatory men. As Ruth learns more about Oakley's life, she uncovers Oakley's secret visits to a psychoanalyst, which are informed by chapters following Oakley through various points around the turn of the century. Along the way, Ruth discovers that she and Reece share an ability held by Oakley to travel in time through memory, and that Ruth is clairvoyant. Ruth then tries to prevent the death of her ex-fiancé, Scott, in a car crash, and to go back in time to prevent her sister from killing herself. Romano-Lax neatly weaves the parallel narratives of Oakley and Ruth, and juggles various literary devices and genres with aplomb. The dual storylines dovetail perfectly for a winning anthem of female power sustained across a century. (Feb.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Ruth McClintock has been obsessed with sharpshooter Annie Oakley for most of her life. She has sacrificed much to become an Oakley scholar, but it all might be worth it when she receives a journal in the mail from a mysterious book dealer with a request for provenance and authentication. Ruth little dreams that researching the journal will plunge her into a search through her own past and a confrontation of demons from long ago. It will also lead to a special partnership with high school senior Reece, a tech whiz with whom she apparently shares a psychic connection. As Ruth delves into the journal and Annie's attempts to travel back in time to right an old wrong, she explores her own psychic abilities to nearly disastrous consequences. VERDICT Romano-Lax's (Plum Rains) brilliantly conceived characters, delicate exploration of abuse and childhood trauma, and examination of vengeance and its power to heal will entrance from the very first page. Her latest is a tour de force that will appeal to a wide variety of readers,--Cynthia Johnson, formerly with Cary Memorial Lib., Lexington, MA

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

1 A N N I E 1 9 0 1 She woke to the shriek of the whistle and the squeal of brakes. Three in the morning, yet the sleeper car was flooded with sparking, shuddering light. In that bright silver moment as the trains collided, she felt herself lifting from the bed, time slowing as it had always done at the bottom of a breath when she lined up a shot. She was floating, her gowned body surrounded by twinkling glass and feathers, every barb aglow. Then she slammed into the wall. A blast of pain raced across her pelvis and up her spine. Too much to bear. Annie Oakley thought, Away . And then she was. Annie was on her back, laid out on a piece of canvas within sight of the toppled train car, a wool blanket over the bottom half of her body. For the moment, no one attending to her. Turning her head, she could see other passengers from the demolished show train being escorted, limping and stunned, toward an upright stock car that had been turned into a makeshift hospital, its large panel doors open and dozens of people crowded inside. Other wood-sided cars had been reduced to splinters, their contents thrown into the swampy North Carolina lowlands alongside the tracks. Outside were cowboys, Indians, train crew, all trying to help. A bison from the show stood in a ditch, unharmed, its massive beautiful head turned toward her, backlit by the yellow dawn. The sun was rising. Hours had passed. But it had not felt like time passing. She had skipped from the moment of the crash until now, like a stone across a pond. She rolled to one side and cried out in pain, attracting the attention of a man in a gray cap who was pointing a rifle at the head of a downed horse. The man hesitated and looked Annie's way while she stared past him, wanting to help the creature, but it was useless. Moving even a few inches had brought her to the edge of a blackout. The horse was on its side on the ground, ribs moving with uneven, quivering breaths. The man settled his shoulders and aimed the rifle again. Pearly smoke, that burning acrid smell, and her thought-- No! --but she knew it must be done, and done well. Eyes closed, she listened and counted. Three shots. A pause. Four more. She felt her anger rise. The placement must be exact for it to be merciful. It shouldn't take so many shots. She opened her eyes and saw the man step a little way down the tracks toward a second, equally lame horse. It was one of her favorites: a dark chestnut with a white blaze down its face. This time, it was as if the rifle were being placed on her own forehead, the steel muzzle set between her own eyes. Skipping forward had been no reprieve; it had only brought her to the next terrible place. She closed her eyes, felt her heart slow. Again, she thought, Away. And she was. Back on the train just as the light filled the sleeper, just as everything turned a glimmering silvery white. She felt herself floating, falling, knowing. It is trauma that sends us away, but there is pain also where we land. 2 R U T H 2 0 1 8 Friday Ruth was just out the door for her speaking engagement at the local high school, laptop bag over her shoulder, when the delivery truck pulled into her driveway. She paused with a hand on the knob, fresh fall Minnesota air filling her lungs, watching as the man in brown shorts approached. She wasn't expecting a package--was she? Hope was dangerous, but she couldn't hold back a smile as he handed over the box. "Something good?" he asked. "Possibly." Taking it, she noted the Vermont return address and heard the soft slide and thud of what could be a rare journal, more than a century old and certainly improperly packed. But she wasn't about to rebuke the sender. Not when he was trusting her with this, Annie Oakley's own words, unknown to any scholar. The sharpshooter had left behind an unfinished autobiography and some everyday correspondence when she'd died in 1926, but little else of substance written in her own hand. Ruth's last email exchange with an antique collector who called himself Nieman had ended inconclusively. He'd agreed to send her a few scans or mail select photocopies on the condition that she understood he was in a hurry, with a large-scale purchase planned pending the journal's authenticity. She promised to take a look, despite his refusal to provide any details on how the item had come into his possession. Context matters, she had replied. The more you withhold, the less reliable my analysis will be. Also please keep in mind that an original provides much more information than a photocopy. I'll work pro bono; that isn't the issue. But I can't do much without quality source materials. The journal was only the first step. Nieman had gotten a glimpse of a letter and wanted to purchase an entire set of rare correspondence, all of it somehow related to the journal in terms of content, about which he had offered only meager clues. Your call , she'd responded, trying to play it cool. I have some time this week. Next month is busier. It was a lie. Aside from the speech she was giving to a history class in thirty minutes--make that twenty--Ruth had nothing scheduled for the rest of the year, aside from trips to the chiropractor and putting her house up for sale. Watching the truck back out, Ruth tried not to wish or want too much. She ran a hand through the curled ends of her auburn hair--styled, for once--trying to prolong this feeling of wellbeing. She was wearing a corduroy jacket she'd ordered online and her luckiest blue-stitched cowboy boots. She'd removed the knee brace she normally wore under baggy sweatpants in order to squeeze into jeans she hadn't bothered to take out of a drawer for months. She felt the warm sun on her face and smelled burning leaves. History is well and good, but the present is worth noticing, too. Remember this. For a few lovely seconds, time didn't matter. But as soon as the delivery truck was out of view, it mattered again. No time to slice through the layers of fibrous brown packing tape. Definitely no time to make sense of journal entries. She should be able to summon some patience, considering she'd been stuck with no new leads for several years. Ruth unlocked the door and hurried to the kitchen counter, planning to leave the box there. Then she spotted the kitchen scissors, sticking out from her jar of wooden spoons. Just a peek. She ran the point of the scissors down the flap and pulled. Inside she saw bubble wrap. Bubble wrap! Nieman should have known better. Through the plastic she saw a color: burgundy edged with dark brown. The real thing. Not a set of photocopies. She wouldn't have taken the risk, but he had, and bless him for it. Her fingers reached to pull the wrapped journal out of the box, but then she caught sight of her watch. She was due in Holloway's class at 2:05. The walk, about three-quarters of a mile from the end of her road, down a trail and to the back entrance of the public school, took a fit, healthy person fifteen minutes. For Ruth, it would be twice as long. She felt her stomach flutter with joy at what she'd received, overlaid by nerves about being late. She shouldn't have opened the box, but she was too excited to feel any regret. She reached into the ceramic dish next to her mail basket, grabbed the key to her Honda Fit and proceeded through the garage door before reason could stop her. Door open, laptop bag on the passenger seat, thumb drive with her slideshow ready as backup in case her own computer was wonky and it was easier to use Holloway's. Garage door up. Seatbelt. Key in the ignition. Maybe today. It had to happen sometime. Why else had she put off selling the car, once she'd broken up with Scott and had no one else to drive or even halfheartedly maintain it? Because you're going to want to drive again. You're going to be ready at some point. The hatchback didn't look anything like the small Subaru sedan she'd smashed up. This was new and bigger, silver, ridiculously clean. Well, of course it was clean. It had less than fifty miles on it. Her hand gripped the gearshift without taking it out of park. She touched her toe to the gas pedal just to feel the positioning--no surprises--then placed the slippery bottom of the boot squarely against the brake. Quick glance at all mirrors. Another squeeze, preparing to shift into drive. Out on the dead-end road, there wasn't a single car or pedestrian to worry about. Look forward. Look right, even though there were only woods that way; still, there could be cyclists or walkers coming from the trail. Look left. Right one last time. Ready. Then she saw it all at once. New Year's Day. The bridge, the car with its hungover driver braking too fast on the icy road ahead of her, the guardrail. She knew what would come next--the vision, terror-fed illusion, whatever it had been. She couldn't let her mind go there, or her body would follow into a full panic attack. Heart in her throat, Ruth yanked her foot off the pedal and her hand off the gear shift. "Oh, god," she sputtered. She took a deep breath as her mind slammed that door shut just in time. She fumbled with the seatbelt, hands shaking, desperate to be free of the strap. She would move slowly, tricking her body into a state of calm. She would gather up her things and exit the garage without drama. She swallowed and inhaled again. As she opened the door, she checked her watch. Ten minutes to two. Now you've done it. }} Excerpted from Annie and the Wolves by Andromeda Romano-Lax All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.