Deadening

Jim Beane

Book cover for Deadening
Book cover for Deadening

Description

The shelling stopped on Nov. 11, 1918, sending millions of American soldiers back to the United States to pick up where they had left off before joining or being drafted into the war effort. Doughboys were sent off to fight and many returned as men, irreparably damaged physically and mentally. The years following WWI were defined, in part in the United States, by the Spanish flu, Prohibition, bootleg whiskey, drug usage, and new drug laws. Amid these changes, traumatized young men returned from the so-called Great War and tried to fit back into their old lives. Many did and many did not -- This novel, The Deadening, deals with two who did not.
Set in the early 1920s, The Deadening is the story of two American doughboys, both casualties, back from the WWI and the paths they travel -- literal and existential. In 1921, the shadow of WWI hangs over two American veterans' home from the war. Drafted doughboys, Harrell Hickman and Willem Redd, find themselves in the northwestern territory of Nebraska on opposite sides of the law. Sheriff Redd suffers from physical wounds, while Hickman lives with a little understood condition, then labelled as shell shock. They return home in a time of societal upheaval and their paths intersect in the town of Wisdom, where the bond of combat veterans is not enough to save them from tragedy. Harrell Hickman walks away from an overcrowded veteran's hospital on the east coast where he has been hospitalized for "shell shock" he has no visible scars. Harrell has no family to return to, no ties to any community. His ability to cope largely depends on alcohol and laudanum. Hopping freights west, he ends up in Wisdom, a small Nebraskan town where he encounters Willem Redd, also a veteran. Redd grew up in Wisdom, is married with children, owns a mercantile, and serves as sheriff for the territory, despite his physical wounds: he lost an arm and an eye in the trenches. Unlike Hickman, he has the love of a wife and support from the community, which has helped him cope, though he too has been irrevocably damaged. Hickman goes to work for John Conover, a rancher, some distance from Wisdom. But Hickman's negligence and drug use results in two unexpected murders--the killing of Conover and the death of Conover's son, Israel. Sheriff Redd sets out for the ranch with his deputy Tim Smallwood to investigate and a fatal clash between the two ex-soldiers ensues.

This narrative tale will be complemented by uncaptioned photograph that evokes Hickman and Will Redd's lives during trench warfare in Europe and after returning to the U.S. The Deadening is relevant to modern readers as American veterans continue to face the overwhelming psychological challenges that battle thrust them into.

About the Author

Jim Beane is a fiction writer. His stories revolve around working class people in working class settings to illuminate their American dream and the costs all people pay to live that dream. Jim lives west of Baltimore, Maryland with his wife and family. His short stories have appeared in more than 25 literary publications, including The MacGuffin, El Portal, The Baltimore Review, The Potomac Review, The Evening Street Review and the anthologies DC Noir and Workers Write: tales from the construction site. By the Sea, his award-winning short story collection, is available on Amazon, Kindle and Smashwords. He worked his days in the construction industry as a painter, electrician, laborer, and master carpenter. Currently, he is an instructor at the Writers Center in Bethesda, Maryland, and a mentor for the Veterans Writing Project. Pre-covid, he created and taught a creative writing class for the Armed Services Arts Partnership. Find out more at http: //www.jimbeane.com.

Critical Reviews

"Jim Beane is a rising star in the East Coast literary scene who now shines his light onto the plains of Middle America and a time in history that foretold many of the problems we all face today in his new and important noir novel The Deadening." --James Grady, American writer and investigative journalist known for his thriller novels on espionage and intrigue such as his recent novel, The Smoke in Our Eyes and his series of Condor novels starting with Six Days of the Condor.




The Deadening is a war novel -- but it's not your typical war novel. It's a western that reads like a classic social novel from another era. Like John Steinbeck, Jim Beane is drawn to what happens when the cold machinery of society grinds up an individual and spits him out. Harrell Hickman is a compelling creation: part hero, part outlaw. Told in tightly controlled, spellbinding prose, The Deadening is a marvelously wise debut novel.--K.E. Semmel, author of The Book of Losman

"The Deadening deftly brings alive the life and death of men grasping to recover from the killing fields of World War I. Set in the American West still raw with struggling ranchers, the novel comes with tinges of Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front and Louis L'Amour's frontier novels. Unrelenting story-telling against a stark setting." Harry Jaffe, a true crime journalist and co-author of Dream City: Race, Power and the Decline of Washington, D.C.

"In Jim Beane's intense debut, a WWI veteran finds trouble on a Nebraska ranch. Harrell Hickman escapes the Baltimore hospital where he's been committed for shell shock and hops a train headed west . . . . Even though Beane grants limited access to his antihero's emotional and psychological state, Hickman's restless and violent actions still give insight into the character and offer an unsparing view of combat trauma." -Publishers Weekly

"The book's muscular, straightforward style and deepening nightmarish tone keep you in its grip. A powerful depiction of the psychological ravages of war."-- KIRKUS REVIEWS

Publishing Information

Publisher: Mandel Vilar Press
Pub date: 2024-11-05
Length: 160 pages

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