What Luck, This Life, Kathryn Schwille
What Luck, This Life, Kathryn Schwille
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What Luck, This Life

Author: Kathryn Schwille

Narrator: various narrators, Richard Ferrone, Stephen Bel Davies, Prentice Onayemi, Scott Aiello, Michael David Axtell, Jessica B. Harris, Amanda Cobb

Unabridged: 5 hr 29 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 09/18/2018


Synopsis

The Columbia space shuttle and its contents rain down on the people of Kiser, Texas, in Kathryn Schwille’s imaginative debut novel set six weeks before the invasion of Iraq.What Luck, This Life begins in the aftermath of the space shuttle’s break-up, as the people of Piney Woods watch their pastures swarm with searchers and reporters bluster at their doors. A shop owner defends herself against a sexual predator who is pushed to new boldness after he is disinvited to his family reunion. A closeted father facing a divorce that will leave his gifted boy adrift retrieves an astronaut’s remains. An engineer who dreams of orbiting earth joins a search for debris and instead uncovers an old neighbor’s buried longing.In a chorus of voices spanning places and years, What Luck, This Life explores the Columbia disaster’s surprising fallout for a town beset by the tensions of class, race, and missed opportunity. Evoking Sherwood Anderson’s classic Winesburg, Ohio and Elizabeth Strout’s Olive Kitteridge, the novel’s unforgettable characters struggle with family upheaval and mortality’s grip and a luminous book emerges—filled with heartache, beauty, and warmth.

About Kathryn Schwille

Kathryn Schwille’s fiction has appeared in New Letters, Memorious, Crazyhorse, West Branch, Sycamore Review, and other literary journals. She was an award-winning newspaper reporter before moving to North Carolina to become an editor at the Charlotte Observer. A graduate of the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College, she lives with her husband in Charlotte, North Carolina.

About Richard Ferrone

Read by Richard Ferrone, Stephen Bel Davies, Prentice Onayemi, Scott Aiello, Michael David Axtell, Jessica B. Harris, and Amanda Leigh Cobb

About Stephen Bel Davies

Stephen Bel Davies has recorded over a hundred titles. Trained at the Juilliard School Drama Division, he has narrated books by a number of New York Times bestselling authors.

About Prentice Onayemi

Prentice Onayemi is an Earphones Award–winning audiobook narrator and a voice and film actor who is known for his roles in The Steam-Room Crooner, AmeriQua, and as Joey in the Tony Award–winning play War Horse.

About Scott Aiello

Scott Aiello has narrated over a dozen audiobooks and is a 2013 Audie Award finalist for his nonfiction narration of Sex and God at Yale by author Nathan Harden. He is a graduate of the Juilliard School drama division and has since performed and directed various New York plays and has been seen on television shows such as Person of Interest and Elementary. Before Juilliard, he was a regular in the Chicago theater circuit.

About Jessica B. Harris

Jessica B. Harris is one of a handful of African Americans who have achieved prominence in the culinary world. She holds a PhD from NYU, teaches English at Queens College, and lectures internationally. Her articles have appeared in Vogue, Food & Wine, Essence, and the New Yorker, among other publications. She has made numerous television and radio appearances and has been profiled in the New York Times. One of the preeminent scholars of the food of the African Diaspora, she has been inducted into the James Beard Who’s Who in Food and Beverage in America, received an honorary doctorate from Johnson & Wales University, holds awards from sources too numerous to note, and has helped the Smithsonian Museum of African American History and Culture to conceptualize its cafeteria.

About Amanda Cobb

Amanda Cobb has narrated numerous audiobooks, including titles by Michele Hauf, Samatha Hunter, and Jayne Ann Krentz. She won an AudioFile Earphones Award for her reading of Let’s Get Lost by Adi Alsaid.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Claire on May 30, 2021

In a series of short episodes, Schwille details the lives of the people of a fictionary small East Texas town following the Columbia space shuttle disaster. Body parts and shuttle parts have rained down on the town and the surrounding area, affecting individuals in all sorts of ways sometimes while......more

Goodreads review by Megan C. on September 25, 2018

LOVED. THIS. BOOK. All the stars and all the hearts for this southern author! The interconnected story format really helped the book move along and keep me engaged, and I love how they all intersect throughout the telling. If you loved the format of Olive Kitteridge, and/or are a fan of strong South......more

Goodreads review by A.L. on February 13, 2022

Well-written and moving, this debut novel, consisting of linked stories, jumps around a bit in time, in tense, and in viewpoint characters. The plot concerns events in Kiser, a fictitious small Texas town before, during, and after the Columbia shuttle disaster on February 1, 2003. The tragedy has im......more

Goodreads review by Katie on April 15, 2024

I knew I liked it because the one complaint I had was that I wanted MORE.......more

Goodreads review by Anna on February 12, 2022

I love Friday Night Lights and books by Elizabeth Strout, so therefore I love this book. I think Schwille does a great job depicting the nuances of small-town relationships and networks, within and across race, gender, and class lines. CW for rape......more


Quotes

“Fans of Thomas Pierce and Amy Hill Hearth will appreciate Schwille’s spare, poetic prose and her willingness to examine both the picturesque and the unsavory sides of small-town life. A deeply thought-provoking novel.” Booklist

“Quietly contemplative and affecting…[A] modern-day Winesburg, Ohio.” Kirkus Reviews

What Luck, This Life is an astonishing work of literary talent, surprising at every turn. The characters are wild and desperate, but they are also us. For we are all cast out, looking for a return. From the tattered remains of disaster, Schwille creates a glimmering constellation of humanity, a flash of heavenly light. Just thinking about this book makes me feel more alive.” Elaine Neil Orr, author of Swimming Between Worlds

“Unexpectedly moving…[Schwille’s] characters speak from the heart; their troubles and small triumphs speak to all of us.” Andrea Barrett, author of Ship Fever

“This is a book full of heart and wisdom.” Thomas Pierce, author of The Afterlives