"What magic, what beauty there is in these pages."--John Freeman, author of Wind, Trees
"Nights From This Galaxy by Wil Weitzel is a merciless debut on the troubled relationships between humans and nature, humans and animals, and humans and humans. Travelers keep watch over a dying lion in the Kalahari Desert. A boy is abused by his stepfather, restrained on a leash and forced to sleep outside in rural Tennessee. A woman sacrifices herself to the wolves of the Adirondacks. Guilt and shame echo through these pages, often consuming the characters with a viscous bite."
--Electric Literature, "The Must-Read Short Story Collections of 2023"
"These tales by
Wil Weitzel have the still, piney quietude you find in a forest when a gust of
air brings a scent rustling through. Then just like that they're over, and
something special lingers. What magic, what beauty there is in these pages."
--John Freeman, author of Wind, Trees
"Ranging over
nearly the whole globe, this taut gathering of gorgeously written stories,
dense with apex predators--sharks, snakes, lions, lynxes, wolves, and, most of
all, people--makes a stately but impassioned case for the illimitable value of
the natural world and our life-giving relationship to it. Weitzel combines a
naturalist's knowledge and a tremendous observational facility to tell the
tales of people who see themselves as part of fearsome nature, not set apart
from it; who battle and defend animals with the same complex, fierce, and
intertwined devotion with which they battle and defend the people in their
lives. Weitzel's voice is arrestingly original; his taciturn but moving
dialogue has an oracular cadence, and he tunes in to a frequency that seems to
reach up from the deepest depths of consciousness itself. Weitzel captures a
way of life--unflinching discipline and dignity, an innate sense of the honor of
work, and something close to genuine humility--that is fighting ferociously to
hang on, and that we desperately need for our spiritual survival. Weitzel is
part stylist and part shaman, but his work is all art, and art of the highest
order."
--Matthew Thomas, New York Times-bestselling author of We
Are Not Ourselves
"To read these stories is to feel the primal
pull of wilderness, the absolute bewilderment of grief, the knife's edge that
comes when we must choose this life or this other life altogether. I found
myself leaning forward reading these stories--arrested, hyperaware, and,
ultimately, awed. This is a first book to reckon with."
--Joe Wilkins, author
of Fall Back Down When I Die and The Mountain and the
Fathers