Madeline ffitch cofounded the punk theater company Missoula Oblongata and is part of the direct-action collective Appalachia Resist! Her writing has appeared in Tin House, Guernica, Granta, VICE, and Electric Literature, among other publications. She is the author of the story collection Valparaiso, Round the Horn.
Finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize
Finalist for the PEN/Hemingway Award for Debut Novel
Finalist for the Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Fiction
A Best Book of 2019 at Vulture
An Indie Next Selection
A Most Anticipated Book of July at The New York Times
A Book to Read in July at debutiful and A. V. Club
A Publishers Weekly Book of the Week Like Bastard Out
of Carolina, ffitch's electrifying debut novel is a paean to
independence and a protest against the materialism of our age.
--O: The Oprah Magazine The three-women trope gets a
deliciously spirited spin in Madeline Ffitch's debut novel Stay and
Fight . . . The narrative plays out like Winter's Bone with a dash
of screwball as the self-described "wolf pack" attempts to live off
the land, and the mothers work to raise a boy without the
interference of the community, however well-intended . . . This
book is packed with quick banter and unforgettable, deeply
complicated characters, including a soft-hearted tree-trimmer named
Rudy and many a raccoon, drake, and black snake.
--Lauren Mechling, Vanity Fair "Delightfully raucous . . .
ffitch's superb comic novel evolves . . . touchingly depicting the
tangled and tenacious family bonds that develop in wild
places."
--Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal "A contemporary feminist
spin on the traditional pioneer novel . . . With Stay and
Fight, ffitch aims to update the frontier narrative from a
queer feminist perspective, spinning a tale of exodus from a cruel
new America where pipelines and pollution pox the countryside . . .
Stay and Fight succeeds in mapping the obscure psychological
and emotional territory that defines a life caught between
commitment and ambivalence, between rebellion and resignation."
--Wes Enzinna, The New York Times "Fantastic . . . If the powers
that be turn this into an award-winning HBO drama, which they
should, they better not fuck with ffitch's language, or I'll chain
myself to an excavator. She balances her good, clean, quick hick
sentences with the natural lyricism of just using the actual names
of trees and power tools."
--Rich Smith, The Stranger Stay and Fight is one of those
rare books that simply knocked me over with the raw power of the
writing and storytelling. I am so impressed with Madeline
ffitch."
--Vick Mickunas, WYSO Fresh Air Stay and Fight is smart and
self-aware enough to refuse any confident solution toward forging
intimacy and independence under our current sociopolitical
circumstances. It knows that such a solution does not exist.
Rather, there is staying, there is fighting, and there is fighting
to stay.
--Scout Turkel, ZYZZYVA A thought-provoking examination of the
independence and autonomy of the family unit . . . [Madeline
ffitch] infuses the pages with a fierce and complex love of place.
Stay and Fight is a dark warning about the environmental impact of
fracking and pipelines, as well as an anthem to the families that
we create.
--Kelly Roark, New City Lit A motley, makeshift family . . .
must figure out how to preserve the things they love . . . and
determine what's worth fighting against and for.
--Kristin Iversen, Nylon, One of 35 Great Books to Read
This Summer "Stay and Fight explodes time-old stereotypes about
the land and its people, delivering instead some of the most
well-drawn and fascinating characters in recent memory."
--Amy Brady, Lit Hub A remarkable book--so knowing and
generous, so gracefully written, you want to stand on a table and
testify."
--Jim Phillips, The Athens News "Stay and Fight
doesn't take sides along clear moral lines. It scrambles those
basic American polarities of nature--the unspoiled goodness and the
seductive resources -- into a relationship that feels new."
--Paul Constant, The Seattle Review of Books "Immersive and
compelling, depicting the life of an Appalachian family that is
equally unconventional and familiar . . . There is nothing flat or
caricatured about the characters in ffitch's novel . . . Stay and
Fight carefully mixes an absurd humor with crushing devastation, so
that we're left incredulous about the circumstances and how we've
arrived there."
--E. M. Tran, The Los Angeles Review of Books Highly
original.
--Suzanne Van Atten, AJC "ffitch flex[es] some finely honed
talent with fictional conflict and plot, and as the prose hops
perspective from the four central characters, including the
wistfully complex Perley, we're engrossed in what's next to a point
of blind faith and hope."
--Matthew Bedard, FLAUNT "A story of family, land, and
dispossession. Madeline ffitch's penetrating novel turns on a
couple, Lily and Karen, who must leave their space on a Women's
Land Trust in Appalachia when they give birth to a son. Their
evolving sense of relationships, home, and society are rendered
with pathos and precision."
--Samuel Partal of Community Book Store, Brooklyn Paper A
good, entertaining novel that redefines life and family.
--The Washington Book Review Remarkable and gripping . . .
The story is told in the alternating voices of Helen, Karen, Lily,
and Perley, and ffitch navigates their personalities beautifully,
creating complex, brilliantly realized characters. As the stakes
rise, for both the family and the preservation of the region, the
novel skewers stereotypes and offers only a messy, real depiction
of people who fully embody the imperative of the novel's title.
This is a stellar novel.
--Publishers Weekly, starred review "[Stay and Fight]
envisions a more compassionate world where people can improve the
institutions that are holding fast to an antiquated,
environment-wrecking sensibility."
--Mark Athitakis, On The Seawall "Madeline ffitch's powerful
debut beautifully illustrates how the bonds forged during hardship
can become the rope that saves you."
--Luisa Smith, Book Passage "Engrossing, sometimes shocking
and often witty . . . ffitch's survival saga of strong, independent
women will appeal to readers of Dorothy Allison's Bastard out of
Carolina and the realistic novels by Manette Ansay, especially
Vinegar Hill."
--BookPage A socially conscious story about environment,
feminism, and children rights.
--Adam Vitcavage, debutiful, 6 Debut Books You Should
Read This July Rendered, through its multiple first-person
perspectives, with wit and nuance . . . A cleareyed, largehearted
take on the social protest novel.
--Kirkus "Madeline ffitch is unafraid of a good
fight. Her first novel is a rousing celebration of conflict, in
particular the conflict that comes with being a family: unspoken
tensions, philosophical disagreements, painful words, messy brawls.
Stay and Fightmakes the powerful argument that fighting within a
family is necessary, formative; it's the practice that prepares us
to fight for our families when the time comes. Hers is the
fiercest, wisest book about parenting that I've read in a very long
time."
--Sarah Shun-lien Bynum, author of Ms. Hempel Chronicles "If
Carolyn Chute and Larry Brown and Carson McCullers had a love
child, it might be Madeline ffitch's brutal and brilliant debut
novel, Stay and Fight. What a wise, funny, and shining story, born
into the world just in time to teach us about friendship, hardship,
self-reliance, and black rat snakes."
--Bonnie Jo Campbell, author of Once Upon a River "Madeline
ffitch is one of the few real writers on the planet. And Stay and
Fight is a real novel. ffitch has the real, funny, not funny,
gorgeous, breathing world in her hands. She is giving it to you to
hold for a while."
--Carolyn Chute, author of The Beans of Egypt, Maine and
Treat Us Like Dogs and We Will Become Wolves "Mythic and
particular, domestic and political, modest and ambitious, strange
and familiar, Stay and Fight is a radical and ferocious
success. The book disturbs the legacy of a frontier literature, and
it points the way to a fresh conception of the Great American
Novel."
--Chris Bachelder, author of The Throwback Special "In her debut
novel, Madeline ffitch renders a loving and lawless portrait of a
remarkable Appalachian family and the conventions that bind them
with undeniable wit and brilliance. Fans of Joy Williams and Nell
Zink will find a familiar, but ffitch brings her own compass to
these woods and clears new ground while she's out there. An
enthralling debut."
--Amelia Gray, author of Isadora "Madeline ffitch's debut
offering brilliantly tackles tensions among three women from
diverse backgrounds and their son, struggling for freedom,
self-sufficiency, and coexistence with nature, whose habitat they
share in the very backwater of southeast Ohio. These endearing but
sometimes quirky characters are portrayed with so much brutal
tenderness, humor, honesty, and wisdom. Complex emotions and an
intersectional worldview expressed in sparse prose that echoes the
lyricism of the Appalachian hills."
--Zakes Mda, author of Ways of
Dying
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