The author of the Dayton Literary Peace Prizewinning novel The Great Glass Sea returns with a gripping adventure story that probes the expansive, shifting wilds of the Sierra Nevada during the Gold Rush.
‘A dark, beautiful, and challenging novel of westward expansion. . . . The rawness and intensity of What Came West recall Cormac McCarthy’s Suttreethe harshness, the urgency, the sudden violenceelevated by Weil’s soaring language.’ Janet Fitch, author of White Oleander and Chimes of a Lost Cathedral
Sierra Nevada, 1840s, just before the Gold Rush ignites. Silas Hall has never belonged anywhere except the wild. Bullied as a child and uneasy even within his own family, he finds brief solace in love and fatherhood before the pull of the frontier overwhelms him. One day he heads west, chasing a life that might finally make sense.
What follows is a swift, pulse-pounding journey into the mountains, where Silas becomes one of the first white settlers to cross into the Sierra Nevada. He forges a precarious peace with the Indigenous people who live thereuntil the Gold Rush crashes in with violent force. As thousands flood the region, the balance shatters, and Silas commits murder, a desperate act that alters the course of every life around him, including his own.
Taut and propulsive, What Came West is told in two parallel voicesone a tense, third-person account of Silas on the run, and the other a confessional letter from Silas to the son he left behindand confronts many different forms of American inheritance, in all its danger, emotional voltage, and mythic momentum. Weil’s masterpiece is a fierce, heart-driven portrait of an outsider racing toward belonging and barreling headlong into consequence.
Genre: Literary Fiction
‘A dark, beautiful, and challenging novel of westward expansion. . . . The rawness and intensity of What Came West recall Cormac McCarthy’s Suttreethe harshness, the urgency, the sudden violenceelevated by Weil’s soaring language.’ Janet Fitch, author of White Oleander and Chimes of a Lost Cathedral
Sierra Nevada, 1840s, just before the Gold Rush ignites. Silas Hall has never belonged anywhere except the wild. Bullied as a child and uneasy even within his own family, he finds brief solace in love and fatherhood before the pull of the frontier overwhelms him. One day he heads west, chasing a life that might finally make sense.
What follows is a swift, pulse-pounding journey into the mountains, where Silas becomes one of the first white settlers to cross into the Sierra Nevada. He forges a precarious peace with the Indigenous people who live thereuntil the Gold Rush crashes in with violent force. As thousands flood the region, the balance shatters, and Silas commits murder, a desperate act that alters the course of every life around him, including his own.
Taut and propulsive, What Came West is told in two parallel voicesone a tense, third-person account of Silas on the run, and the other a confessional letter from Silas to the son he left behindand confronts many different forms of American inheritance, in all its danger, emotional voltage, and mythic momentum. Weil’s masterpiece is a fierce, heart-driven portrait of an outsider racing toward belonging and barreling headlong into consequence.
Genre: Literary Fiction
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