From the Longing Orchard
By (Author) Jessica Jopp
Red Hen Press
Red Hen Press
19th October 2023
United States
General
Fiction
813.6
Winner of Quill Prose Award 2020 (United States)
Paperback
320
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
Eighteen-year-old Sonya Hudson has been gripped by phobia since she was thirteen. What would make navigating the world so difficult for this budding visual artist When the story opens, she lives with her mother and her sister in a suburb in New York in the late 1970s. The narrative carries us back through her childhood, where she struggles with the familys frequent moving and with her parents increasingly fraught marriage. Lingering at the periphery of her consciousness is the shadow of a damaged boy she knew when she was very young. Reverence for the natural world provides comfort, as does her fierce attachment to her sister and her parents poignant guidance. But it is the intimacy with another young woman that ultimately offers a path to healing. In language soaring with poetic incantation, From the Longing Orchard shows us the ways in which a young woman and those she loves all must contend with a longing of some kind and how they seek from each other, and sometimes find, the needed balm.
In this novel, words take on
the weight of objects, shimmer in images that linger long after the pages are
turned. Jopp, a gifted poet, is also a natural storyteller, and she has created
a world I want to return to again and again. Breathtaking at the level of
language with characters both complicated and alive on the page, From the Longing Orchard will enchant
you while it breaks your heart--a perfect reading experience if
you ask me. I loved it.
--Anne Dyer Stuart, author of What Girls Learn and winner of the Henfield/Transatlantic Prize for
Fiction
Jessica Jopp grew up in New York state. She holds an MFA from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. An award-winning poet, Jopp has published her work in numerous journals, among them POETRY, Seneca Review, and Denver Quarterly. Her collection The History of a Voice was awarded the Baxter Hathaway Prize in Poetry from EPOCH, and it was published in 2021 by Headmistress Press. She has been a finalist for the Yale Younger Poets Prize, the Juniper Prize, the Prairie Schooner Book Prize, and the Honickman Prize. Jopp teaches in the English Department at Slippery Rock University. She lives in Indiana, Pennsylvania, where she is on the board of a nonprofit working to protect a community woodland.