Reader Score
77%
77% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Great
Based on 8 reviews on
A stunning and "spiky debut" (The Times, London) novel set in the rugged, rural landscape of northwest England, where two sheep farmers lose their flocks and decide to reverse their fortunes by stealing sheep from a rich farm in the south--for fans of Annie Proulx and Cormac McCarthy.
In early 2001, a lethal disease breaks out on the hill farms of northwest England, emptying the valleys of sheep and filling the skies with smoke as they burn the carcasses. Two neighboring shepherds lose everything and set their sights on a wealthy farm in the south with its flock of prizewinning animals. So begins the dark tale of Steve Elliman and William Herne.
As their sheep rustling leads to more and more difficult decisions, the struggles of the land are never far away. Steve's only distraction is his growing fascination with William's enigmatic and independent wife, Helen. When their mountain home comes under the sway of a lawless outsider, Colin Tinley, Steve must save himself and Helen in a savage conflict that threatens the ancient ways of the Lakeland fells.
Told in the hardscrabble voice of a forgotten England, Scott Preston creates an uncompromising vision of farmers lost in brutal devotion to their flocks, the aching love affairs that men and women use to sustain themselves, and the painful consequences of a breathtaking heist gone bad. The Borrowed Hills "strides confidently across its pages, like the seasoned work of a veteran" (Star Tribune, Minneapolis), a thrilling and gritty adventure that reimagines the American Western for Britain's moors and mountains where survival is in the blood.
"[A] blistering debut . . . Preston's brilliant tonal range extends from epic heroism, as the men scramble after sheep on shale knee-deep in muck, to uncompromising realism. . . . This dark and inspired tale pulses with life." --Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Preston's debut is everything it sets out to be: picturesque but brutal and uncompromising . . . this steely tale will have a lasting effect on the reader." --Booklist
"The Borrowed Hills is the strangled, savagely beautiful swan song of the Cumbrian peasant farmer. . . . The passages that stay with us are those that expose the human qualities of frailty and compassion, hitherto hidden or distorted, under the pure and clarified light of the natural world." --New York Review of Books
"Preston's sinewy, supple prose showcases a cast of desperate sheep farmers as they grapple with the elements and their own clandestine urges . . . a modern-day Moses and Aaron tending their flock. Tragedy feels as inevitable as biblical prophecy. . . . Preston's gifts are abundant. He taps the cadences of northwest England, lopping off the subjects of his sentences, molding idiosyncratic nouns ('nowt' and 'owt') like putty . . . The Borrowed Hills strides confidently across its pages, like the seasoned work of a veteran. Preston is already firing on all cylinders, a writer to watch." --Hamilton Cain, Minneapolis Star-Tribune
"Unfolds with a pleasurable, slow-burn assurance . . . The Borrowed Hills is at its most resonant and powerful when the human drama . . . takes its proper place in the pitiless and timeless landscape on which all of nature's tenants--man and animal alike--live and die." --New York Times Book Review
"A tremendously exciting novel . . . A brilliantly realized voice: Steve's every utterance is the product of where he comes from . . . as blunt and brutal as the fells he works among." --Times Literary Supplement (UK)
"A spiky debut . . . precisely focused with flavour, intensity, and oodles of character." --The Times (UK)