Reviews
“[Christopher] Rowe is one of the finest and most humane writers of science fiction working today. His territory lies within the ruptured space where technology, humanity, and the natural world intersect, and his subject matter is trauma and the possibility of restoration, which he addresses with both tenderness and clinical skill.”—Kelly Link
“These Prisoning Hills is just as haunted and heartfelt, as violent and vibrant, as the Bluegrass State itself.”—Alix E. Harrow
“Meticulous prose, a generous heart, and a wild imagination—this is what we expect from Christopher Rowe, and this is what he continues to provide.”—Karen Joy Fowler
“Christopher Rowe’s future Kentucky is at once familiar and delightfully, cinematically strange.”—Sarah Pinsker
“Some of the richest landscapes I’ve walked are ones that only Christopher Rowe can show me. Among the proud, brave irregulars of 21st-century fiction, Rowe is our most visionary mapmaker. I’d follow him anywhere!”—Andy Duncan
“In just under 150 pages, Rowe is able to develop a completely believable world with relatable characters that draw the reader in from the start.”—Booklist
“A succinct but surprisingly intuitive character study.”—Library Journal
“In one sense, These Prisoning Hills is a super-postmodern version of a classic American guide-to-the-wilderness tale that dates back to Daniel Boone and James Fenimore Cooper; in another, it recalls the ‘‘forbidden zone’’ plots of much post-apocalyptic SF; in yet another, […] it’s a suspenseful future-war tale. For someone with so many apparent roots in traditional SF, Rowe still manages to make his Tennessee both completely new and thoroughly grounded, and not quite like any other setting in SF.“—Locus