
"Charlie J. Stephens' tender novel takes a child's perspective on the pains of being poor in rural Oregon. Knowing that children like Smokey are cast as furniture in the house of adult desires, immobile and without needs, A Wounded Deer Leaps Highest begs us to take them seriously."
--FOREWORD REVIEWS
In 1980's Oregon, Smokey is figuring out how to survive childhood with a young mom who is increasingly desperate in her search for love. As their mother's boyfriends come and go, Smokey aches for the comfort and safety their mother can never quite provide. When a dangerous new man moves into the house, Smokey seeks refuge in the nearby forests--finding comfort as they give themselves over to the strength and beauty of the natural world.
--CHELSIA RICE, Montana Book Company
"A Wounded Deer Leaps Highest is a debut as wondrous as the life it portrays. In Moss River, Oregon, where the sky is the exact color of a blood orange, eight-year-old Smokey lives where no life seems possible by befriending animals, depending on Big Oak, and latching onto the moments of goodness their mother can offer. With a light touch and in beautiful prose, Charlie J. Stephens creates a life and makes it matter."