Half an Inch of Water, Percival Everett
Half an Inch of Water, Percival Everett
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Half an Inch of Water
Stories

Author: Percival Everett

Narrator: Sean Crisden

Unabridged: 4 hr 44 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 05/27/2025


Synopsis

A new collection of stories set in the West from "one of the most gifted and versatile of contemporary writers" (NPR)

Percival Everett's long-awaited new collection of stories, his first since 2004's Damned If I Do, finds him traversing the West with characteristic restlessness. A deaf Native American girl wanders off into the desert and is found untouched in a den of rattlesnakes. A young boy copes with the death of his sister by angling for an unnaturally large trout in the creek where she drowned. An old woman rides her horse into a mountain snowstorm and sees a long-dead beloved dog.

For the plainspoken men and women of these stories—fathers and daughters, sheriffs and veterinarians—small events trigger sudden shifts in which the ordinary becomes unfamiliar. A harmless comment about how to ride a horse changes the course of a relationship, a snakebite gives rise to hallucinations, and the hunt for a missing man reveals his uncanny resemblance to an actor. Half an Inch of Water tears through the fabric of the everyday to examine what lies beneath the surface of these lives. In the hands of master storyteller Everett, the act of questioning leads to vistas more strange and unsettling than could ever have been expected.

About Percival Everett

Percival Everett is a literary shapeshifter, an author whose work defies genre and expectation. Born in 1956, he has carved out a career as one of America’s most daring and intellectually playful writers, blending satire, philosophy, and social critique across novels, short stories, and poetry. With a bibliography spanning dozens of books-including Erasure, I Am Not Sidney Poitier, and The Trees, a Pulitzer Prize finalist-Everett tackles race, identity, and the absurdities of modern life with razor-sharp wit and profound depth.

A professor of English at the University of Southern California, Everett is also an accomplished painter, musician, and horse trainer, embodying the restless curiosity that defines his fiction. His work, often compared to that of Ralph Ellison and Thomas Pynchon, resists easy categorization, making him one of contemporary literature’s most unpredictable and essential voices.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Lark on January 30, 2019

I enjoyed every story in the collection. A mix of themes, stories of journeys that may or may not involve spiritual elements, of families in conflict, or of a test of some kind; all set in a harsh and beautiful landscape. The stories seem to both begin and to end mid-stream, and yet, to be entirely......more

Goodreads review by Jonathan on April 28, 2024

I'll be honest in saying its difficult to put into words Percival Everett's unique qualities. Its rare to uncover an author whose storytelling spans multiple genre using unique perspectives and character names that could be game show material! Here he shows an ability to tell short form stories base......more

Goodreads review by Cody on September 16, 2024

Loved it. The whole cowboy, hillbilly, vaguely situated near Laramie, Wyoming shit just works incredibly well for Everett, likely cause it’s 100% genuine. I could read a thousand of PE’s fishing stories (always a zugbug!) and still want more. Probably his best collection, the thematic constants and......more

Goodreads review by Betsy on November 22, 2017

This is my sixth Percival Everett book, the second short story anthology, and this one works as a continuing story with repeating characters. Unlike all of the other books I’ve read so far, these stories are more traditional and literary, not humorous, all occupying the same Western (Wyoming, Colora......more

Goodreads review by Paul on December 01, 2015

Each year, I see the candidates for major literary awards and prizes and I never see Percival Everett's name mentioned. I don't understand this, but the awards and prizes aren't mine to give out, so I'm probably not intended to understand. In the meantime, Mr. Everett's writings flow on, as inexorab......more