"Trampoline is that rare kind of book, a first novel that feels like a fourth or fifth...It is a roaring tale that knows when to tamp its own fire-which is another way of saying that it is funny as hell but will hurt you too." - Electric Literature Dawn Jewell is fifteen. She is restless, curious, and wry. She listens to Black Flag, speaks her mind, and joins her grandmother's fight against mountaintop removal mining almost in spite of herself. "I write by ear," says Robert Gipe, and Dawn's voice is the essence of his debut novel, Trampoline. Jagged and honest, Trampoline is a portrait of a place struggling with the economic and social forces that threaten and define it. Inspired by oral tradition and punctuated by Gipe's raw and whimsical drawings, it is above all about its heroine, Dawn, as she decides whether to save a mountain or save herself; be ruled by love or ruled by anger; remain in the land of her birth or run for her life.
"Trampoline is that rare kind of book, a first novel that feels like a fourth or fifth...It is a roaring tale that knows when to tamp its own fire-which is another way of saying that it is funny as hell but will hurt you too." - Electric Literature Dawn Jewell is fifteen. She is restless, curious, and wry. She listens to Black Flag, speaks her mind, and joins her grandmother's fight against mountaintop removal mining almost in spite of herself. "I write by ear," says Robert Gipe, and Dawn's voice is the essence of his debut novel, Trampoline. Jagged and honest, Trampoline is a portrait of a place struggling with the economic and social forces that threaten and define it. Inspired by oral tradition and punctuated by Gipe's raw and whimsical drawings, it is above all about its heroine, Dawn, as she decides whether to save a mountain or save herself; be ruled by love or ruled by anger; remain in the land of her birth or run for her life.
When Dawn Jewell—fifteen, restless, curious, and wry—joins her grandmother’s fight against mountaintop removal mining in spite of herself, she has to decide whether to save a mountain or save herself; be ruled by love or by anger; remain in the land of her birth or run for her life.
Robert Gipe lives and works in Harlan County, Kentucky. Pop is his third Ohio University Press novel. His first, Trampoline, won the 2016 Weatherford Award for Appalachian novel of the year. His second novel, Weedeater, was a Weatherford finalist. For the past thirty years he has worked in arts-based organizing and is the founding coproducer of the Higher Ground community performance series. He has contributed to numerous journals and anthologies, is a playwright, and is currently a script consultant on a forthcoming television show based on Beth Macy’s Dopesick. Author photo by Amelia Kirby.
“A story that left my heart at once warmed and shattered,
Trampoline rides the razor’s edge of raw beauty. This is Appalachia
illuminated with a light uniquely its own. I dare say Robert Gipe
has invented his own genre.”
“Fascinating, honest, and sometimes darkly comic…The consciousness
of the mountain itself and the animals on it become the quiet heart
of this loud and heartbreaking book.”
*Orion*
“Rare is the novel that delivers on all that is promised by fans or
by the carefully curated blurbs featured on its cover. But, in my
mind, Trampoline fulfills these promises, portraying Appalachia in
a manner that falls prey neither to the demeaning stereotypes nor
the romanticized clichés that are commonly associated with the
region and its literature.”
*Cold Mountain Review*
“I fear this book. I’m in love with this book. I’m laughing out
loud at this book. I am knocked to my knees in grief by this book.
One of the most powerful works of contemporary fiction I’ve read in
years. I’ll never forget Dawn Jewell. I’ll never escape Canard
County.”
“Dawn Jewell is one of the most memorable and endearing narrators I
have ever read. She's like a combination of Scout Finch, Huck Finn,
Holden Caulfield, and True Grit's Mattie Ross, but even more she is
completely her own person, the creation of Robert Gipe, an author
who has given us a novel that provides everything we need in great
fiction: a sense of place that drips with kudzu and coal dust;
complex characters who rise up off the page as living, breathing
people we will not soon forget; and a rollicking story that is by
turns hilarious, profound, deeply moving, and always lyrically
beautiful. I think Trampoline is one of the most important novels
to come out of Appalachia in a long while and announces an
important new voice in our literature. I loved every single bit of
this book.”
“Trampoline is a moving account of working-class Kentucky mountain
people who live in an environment dominated by mountaintop removal
coal mining. Trampoline is also the most innovative American
fiction to appear in years. The story, the characters and the
writing style are startlingly new, as in: original. Trampoline adds
a fresh consciousness to the enduring conversation about the
Appalachian region. Pathos and humor are present in about equal
measure.”
“I believe it takes a special genius to create a story that is
hilarious and poignant and eloquent all at the same time, and
Robert Gipe has done just that in his amazing debut Trampoline.
Gipe’s is a voice like no other and I guarantee you’ll fall in love
just like I did.”
“Robert Gipe has the most original voice to emerge on the literary
landscape since Lewis Nordan. Dawn Jewell is a delicious heroine,
whether she’s shouldering her way through a community conflict or a
family scrimmage. Geographically anchored, yet universally
relevant, Trampoline is funny, serious, dark, radiant, and
amazingly honest, filled with rich characters and a culture wracked
with contradiction and heartbreak, but also strength and
resilience. An excellent debut from a gifted and insightful
writer.”
“Robert Gipe has produced a one-of-a-kind masterpiece. Here’s a
narrator, Dawn, trapped absolutely in an Appalachian Gregor Samsa
kind of way, surrounded by loved ones [who are] at times difficult
to love. Dawn is precocious, bighearted, and fearless—a
mountaintop-removal-fighting Mattie Ross. I couldn’t put this novel
down.”
“Billboards. That’s what we need. ‘Dawn Jewell is queen’ on one.
‘Jump on this Trampoline’ on another. All of them shouting how good
this book is. Read it, everyone, read it.”
“There are the books you like, and the books you love, and then
there are the ones you want to hold to your heart for a minute
after you turn the last page. Robert Gipe’s illustrated novel
Trampoline is one of those—not just well written, which it is; and
not just visually appealing, which the wonderfully deadpan
black-and-white drawings make sure of; but there is something
deeply lovable about it, an undertow of affection you couldn’t
fight if you wanted to. …Gipe deftly avoids every single cliché
that could trip such a story up, which includes having a
pitch-perfect ear for dialect and making it into something
marvelous.”
*Library Journal’s “What We’re Reading”*
“In 1980…John Kennedy Toole’s classic, A Confederacy of Dunces, was
published by the Louisiana State University Press. The following
year it won the Pulitzer Prize in fiction. That may have been the
last time a university press introduced a major American voice—the
last time, that is, until now…. Trampoline is a new American
masterpiece.”
*Knoxville News Sentinel/Chapter16.org*
“…quite possibly, one of the best books to ever come out of eastern
Kentucky.”
*Huntington Herald-Dispatch*
“Trampoline is that rare kind of book, a first novel that feels
like a fourth or fifth.… It is a roaring tale that knows when to
tamp its own fire—which is another way of saying that it is funny
as hell but will hurt you too.”
*Electric Literature*
“Gipe’s powerful sense of place will seep into teen readers’ lives.
This is a killer debut of one teenager’s flight from
destruction—strong stuff tempered with humor and love.”
*School Library Journal*
“Gipe [is] the best of populists: generous of spirit but not
smarmy. There are some deeply flawed people in Dawn’s circle (she’s
one of ’em), but they’re never all bad, never unchangeable but
never unrealistically transformed. Gipe has a gift for staging
tender reconciliations that you suspect won’t last through the
afternoon.…To borrow from an old country song, “Trampoline” is
ragged but right, and it builds to an effective blend of
contrasting tones: world-weary yet hopeful, not too sentimental but
— let’s quote Dawn once more — ‘soft, like the sound a Christmas
tree makes when you throw it over the hill.’”
*Minneapolis Star Tribune*
“Canard County is a fictional county in Eastern Kentucky. It's
rural, poor, and white. Coal mining, unemployment, drug addiction,
and religious fervor dominate the landscape and the culture. It is,
in other words, straight-up Appalachia. But as Trampoline embraces
its Appalachian-ness, it also questions commonly held notions of
what it means to be Appalachian. Its combination of prose narrative
and quirky illustrations delivers a unique storytelling form, and
the insightful, hilarious, and honest protagonist Dawn Jewell makes
Trampoline unforgettable.”
*Southern Spaces*
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