The rich, brutal history of Kansas ignites—and propels—the eight stories that make up Andrew Malan Milward’s accomplished second collection. By its conclusion, the reader is left considering many questions of history, identity, race, and how we retell these stories to others and ourselves.” — Boston Globe
“The eight stories in Milward’s collection don’t just use history as a jumping-off point, they also raise questions about the nature of recorded history. Each one feels as complete and complex as a novel. Even better, each story is distinct, but benefits from its nearness to the others. . . . This collection is sharp, shrewd, and consistently thought provoking.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Riveting fiction in which Milward’s fascination with his home state’s history serves the plot and characters rather than the other way around. . . . unlike many young writers, his gaze isn’t directed at his own navel, but outward at the rough, strange history of the state that formed him.” — The Millions
“A fast-paced page-turner of a book, with Milward weaving together fictional narrative, historical fact and illusory anecdotes so seamlessly you won’t be aware of how much you’ve read or learned until you’re already done.” — Bookreporter.com
“He sets a standard for the story collection. This collection brims with accessible originality, unparalleled range and thought-provoking heartbreak. . . . Like E.L. Doctorow in ‘Ragtime,’ Milward fashions high art from historical events and figures.” — Jackson Clarion-Ledger
“In this brilliant, inventive collection, Milward channels ghosts from his native Kansas into eight stories that could spring only from that fraught border of the Civil War.” — New York Times Book Review
“This is an evocative and provoking collection, full of Andrew Milward’s inventive craft.” — New York Journal of Books
“The eight stories in Milward’s collection don’t just use history as a jumping-off point, they also raise questions about the nature of recorded history. Each one feels as complete and complex as a novel. This collection is sharp, shrewd, and consistently thought provoking.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Milward is a protégé of Marilynne Robinson and Tim O’Brien, and it shows in the way he takes well-worn history book anecdotes and transforms them into something human, raw, and immediate...I adored it—it’s one of my absolute favorites of the year.” — Book Riot
“The challenge of turning history into short stories is met by Milward, who mines his home state, Kansas, to put life into characters pulled from time’s landslide. . . . With his portrayal of conscience-ridden individuals navigating historical forces, Milward has achieved a landmark feat in fiction.” — Asheville Citizen-Times
“Throughout the book, Milward makes astute observations about politics, not only about the political climate of past eras but also of our own-a rarity in contemporary American fiction.” — BookPage
“[I Was A Revolutionary ] is a book about history: how the past is viewed, how that view changes with time and from viewer to viewer, and what those changes mean....fascinating.” — AV Club
“Lyrical prose beautifully illuminates the complex history of Kansas as Milward tells stories about universal themes, revealing truths only found in fiction.” — KMUW/Wichita Public Radio
“Andrew Malan Milward’s new collection, I Was a Revolutionary , grows complex narratives from these obscure and captivating historical fragments. His writing is quiet, beautiful, and harrowing, bringing life to people and places you thought you knew. It’s a book powered by the past, if not consumed by it.” — KCUR.ORG/KANSAS PUBLIC RADIO
“Andrew Malan Milward’s new collection, I Was a Revolutionary , grows complex narratives from these obscure and captivating historical fragments. His writing is quiet, beautiful, and harrowing, bringing life to people and places you thought you knew. It’s a book powered by the past, if not consumed by it.” — Diane Cook, author of Man V. Nature
“The writing is always bold, the stakes are always high...I Was A Revolutionary recalls W. G. Sebald in its interweaving of historical memory and present concerns, and Aleksandar Hemon in its understanding that fragments can set off adventures.” — Will Chancellor, author of A Brave Man Seven Storeys Tall
“Not since Edward P. Jones have I encountered a writer who so brilliantly captures a specific place, imbuing it with new life and impressive nuance. A tremendous collection that I won’t ever forget.” — Molly Antopol, author of The UnAmericans
“Milward’s collection is both political and a love song. Milward’s aching ballads are about Kansas, in particular, but in their brilliant, kaleidoscopic view of history, they offer penetrating insight about America as a whole. Read this book.” — Elliott Holt, author of You Are One of Them
“Andrew Malan Milward summons the history of his home state with grace, wit, and kaleidoscopic brilliance. These stories are haymakers, bloody and wild and just the thing we need to wake up and fight. Haunting and beautiful and required reading for anyone who cares about the soul of America.” — Jim Gavin, author of Middle Men
“Andrew Malan Milward is a subtle writer with an unsparing eye and a heart as vast as the prairie...a writer to cheer for.” — Lauren Groff, author of Fates and Furies
“Spanning a hundred and fifty years in the history of Kansas, the eight vivid and masterfully linked stories in I Was A Revolutionary are a stunning example of the importance of ‘place’ in literature. Without a doubt, Andrew Malan Milward is one of the smartest and most inventive writers working today.” — Donald Ray Pollock, author of Knockemstiff and The Devil All the Time
“Kansas bursts from the pages of this ingenious, dazzling collection. Andrew Malan Milward turns his home state into an enthralling main character, escorting us through corridors of history and mythology into the very core of the country.” — Shawn Vestal, author of Godforsaken Idaho
“Andrew Malan Milward has rendered the tangled, dark and ever-hopeful American heart with such precision and ache that I could almost hear it beating as I read. This collection is both luminous and necessary.” — Ramona Ausubel, author of No One is Here Except All of Us and A Guide to Being Born
“I was stunned by how moving I found these stories. They were deeply relevant to me as an American and red-blooded member of the human race, in all our grief and fury and bravery and hopefulness. Milward’s achievement is-dare I say it?-revolutionary.” — Alan Heathcock, author of Volt
In this brilliant, inventive collection, Milward channels ghosts from his native Kansas into eight stories that could spring only from that fraught border of the Civil War.
New York Times Book Review
A fast-paced page-turner of a book, with Milward weaving together fictional narrative, historical fact and illusory anecdotes so seamlessly you won’t be aware of how much you’ve read or learned until you’re already done.
He sets a standard for the story collection. This collection brims with accessible originality, unparalleled range and thought-provoking heartbreak. . . . Like E.L. Doctorow in ‘Ragtime,’ Milward fashions high art from historical events and figures.
Riveting fiction in which Milward’s fascination with his home state’s history serves the plot and characters rather than the other way around. . . . unlike many young writers, his gaze isn’t directed at his own navel, but outward at the rough, strange history of the state that formed him.
The rich, brutal history of Kansas ignites—and propels—the eight stories that make up Andrew Malan Milward’s accomplished second collection. By its conclusion, the reader is left considering many questions of history, identity, race, and how we retell these stories to others and ourselves.
This is an evocative and provoking collection, full of Andrew Milward’s inventive craft.
New York Journal of Books
Milward is a protégé of Marilynne Robinson and Tim O’Brien, and it shows in the way he takes well-worn history book anecdotes and transforms them into something human, raw, and immediate...I adored it—it’s one of my absolute favorites of the year.
The challenge of turning history into short stories is met by Milward, who mines his home state, Kansas, to put life into characters pulled from time’s landslide. . . . With his portrayal of conscience-ridden individuals navigating historical forces, Milward has achieved a landmark feat in fiction.
Lyrical prose beautifully illuminates the complex history of Kansas as Milward tells stories about universal themes, revealing truths only found in fiction.
KMUW/Wichita Public Radio
Not since Edward P. Jones have I encountered a writer who so brilliantly captures a specific place, imbuing it with new life and impressive nuance. A tremendous collection that I won’t ever forget.
[I Was A Revolutionary ] is a book about history: how the past is viewed, how that view changes with time and from viewer to viewer, and what those changes mean....fascinating.
The writing is always bold, the stakes are always high...I Was A Revolutionary recalls W. G. Sebald in its interweaving of historical memory and present concerns, and Aleksandar Hemon in its understanding that fragments can set off adventures.
Spanning a hundred and fifty years in the history of Kansas, the eight vivid and masterfully linked stories in I Was A Revolutionary are a stunning example of the importance of ‘place’ in literature. Without a doubt, Andrew Malan Milward is one of the smartest and most inventive writers working today.
Kansas bursts from the pages of this ingenious, dazzling collection. Andrew Malan Milward turns his home state into an enthralling main character, escorting us through corridors of history and mythology into the very core of the country.
Andrew Malan Milward’s new collection, I Was a Revolutionary , grows complex narratives from these obscure and captivating historical fragments. His writing is quiet, beautiful, and harrowing, bringing life to people and places you thought you knew. It’s a book powered by the past, if not consumed by it.
Andrew Malan Milward is a subtle writer with an unsparing eye and a heart as vast as the prairie...a writer to cheer for.
Andrew Malan Milward has rendered the tangled, dark and ever-hopeful American heart with such precision and ache that I could almost hear it beating as I read. This collection is both luminous and necessary.
Andrew Malan Milward’s new collection, I Was a Revolutionary , grows complex narratives from these obscure and captivating historical fragments. His writing is quiet, beautiful, and harrowing, bringing life to people and places you thought you knew. It’s a book powered by the past, if not consumed by it.
KCUR.ORG/KANSAS PUBLIC RADIO
Andrew Malan Milward summons the history of his home state with grace, wit, and kaleidoscopic brilliance. These stories are haymakers, bloody and wild and just the thing we need to wake up and fight. Haunting and beautiful and required reading for anyone who cares about the soul of America.
Throughout the book, Milward makes astute observations about politics, not only about the political climate of past eras but also of our own-a rarity in contemporary American fiction.
Milward’s collection is both political and a love song. Milward’s aching ballads are about Kansas, in particular, but in their brilliant, kaleidoscopic view of history, they offer penetrating insight about America as a whole. Read this book.
I was stunned by how moving I found these stories. They were deeply relevant to me as an American and red-blooded member of the human race, in all our grief and fury and bravery and hopefulness. Milward’s achievement is-dare I say it?-revolutionary.
★ 06/01/2015 The eight stories in Milward’s second collection (after The Agriculture Hall of Fame) don’t just use history as a jumping-off point, they also raise questions about the nature of recorded history itself. Each one feels as complete and complex as a novel. Even better, each story is distinct, but benefits from its nearness to the others. The opening story, “The Burning of Lawrence,” examines Quantrill’s Raiders from conventional and meta perspectives, referencing a 1920s song about Quantrill, a 1912 photograph, and the 1999 Ang Lee film Ride with the Devil. The second story, “O Death,” picks up after the Civil War, with a set of characters facing an uncertain future. The time line moves forward into the 1920s (“The Americanist”) and the 1950s (“Hard Feelings”). The centerpiece of the book is “A Defense of History,” which follows the research of a historian called the Assistant, who gathers information about the Populists, a Kansas political party from a century ago, and is confronted with ethical questions when he comes across conflicting original sources. The title story, which closes the book, is also set in the world of academia and hinges on a professor of Kansas history stirring outrage after landing his new post. This collection is sharp, shrewd, and consistently thought provoking. (Aug.)
2015-06-07 The political and cultural history of Kansas is the backdrop for Milward's (The Agriculture Hall of Fame, 2012) ambitious set of short stories. The tales jump not only between locations, but between generations as well. "The Burning of Lawrence" concerns a fascinating if little-known historical event, a guerrilla raid on that city led by William Quantrill, who massacred civilians in a Confederate Civil War retaliation. The central plot about a conflicted soldier charging with Quantrill is gripping, but Milward dilutes it with frequent digressions including a less-compelling tale about a modern-day guitarist in the same town. Likewise, in "Good Men a Long Time Gone," so much space is devoted to the characters' back stories that the central act of violence loses its impact. The most effective story is the closing title piece, one of the few here that's tight and focused. A Bill Ayers-type character who was involved in revolutionary student protests during the 1960s is now a college professor dealing with divorce, a failed affair with a student, and the repercussions from his past. Yet he ultimately loses his job for reasons that have nothing to do with the above and everything to do with the financial struggles facing academia in the present day. A few of the stories are strong and memorable, but elsewhere, Milward's narrative cleverness and structural experiments can get in the way of empathy for his characters.