When I heard that a new Callan Wink book was on the horizon, I knew I had to be an early reader. I loved his novel August and his short story collection Dog Run Moon. And when I saw that Beartooth was being compared to two of my favorites—Peter Heller and Donald Ray Pollock—I was positively salivating.
Now I’m here to tell you that this book is good. Can’t pull yourself away good. Can’t come up for air good. Let me tell you how good it is: I’m an urban woman who has never camped, has rarely been in the wilderness, and is about as far from a survivalist as you can get, yet I felt completely immersed in the world that Callan Wink created. Beartooth is like receiving an all-expenses visa to a whole different world.
The plot in a nutshell: Thad and Hazen are two brothers from Yellowstone country. Their mother, Sacajawea, deserted them when they were young and is a total enigma to them, and their father recently died. Isolated and alone, they survive by the skin of their teeth, chopping firewood and poaching bears. Then, a nefarious Scotsman approaches them with a dangerous scheme: smuggling elk antlers out of Yellowstone, which carries hefty fines and a jail sentence. They reluctantly accept after things go from bad to worse for the brothers. As they navigate this treacherous path, their emotional journey is as compelling as the physical dangers they face.
The intimately connected brothers, Thad and Hazen, are at the heart of the story. They are starkly different in their approach to life. Thad, the pragmatic one, has incorporated their father’s spartan work philosophies and unyielding adherence to regulation. He is meticulous, work-oriented, clear-headed, and resourceful. His one flaw, which the Scotsman quickly gleans, is his belief that he’s his brother’s keeper and that Hazen would flop without him there to lead. Hazen, on the other hand, lets life have its way with him and rarely considers the consequences of his action. He is comfortable in his own skin, though. Thad describes him succinctly: “The way he acts is how he is.”
Not unlike Peter Heller in The River, Callan Wink places these brothers in a high-stakes situation where two men of vastly different temperaments must struggle to complete a feat that holds the key to their future. Showcased against immutable natural history and nature's majesty and potential violence, the action unfolds in surprising ways. The writing is powerful and visceral as the two brothers are forced to battle the natural world that rages both inside and outside of them to survive. This book gets an unqualified and honest 5-star rating from me, and I thank Spiegel & Grau for the privilege of receiving an early copy.