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ARKANSAS BLACK by Alexander Blevens

ARKANSAS BLACK

by Alexander Blevens

Pub Date: Oct. 14th, 2025
ISBN: 9798999079404
Publisher: Lost Meridian Press

Secrets, lies, and failing crops are tearing a family, and their farm, apart in Blevens’ historical novel.

It’s 1927 in Benton County, Arkansas, and 30-year-old Jesse Fitch lives on his family farm with his 27-year-old wife, Marybeth, and their son Levi, who’s 7. His twin brother, Silas, is also there, as are Silas’ wife and daughters, and the siblings’ father, known as “Paps.” The land has been in their family for several generations, but it’s not producing like it used to do. A late frost, too much rain, and continued pest infestations have kept the trees from growing fruit, which means no money’s coming in for the family. Jesse is sure that the answer is to give up the farm and head west, but Silas and Paps are dead set against the idea, believing that the trees will fruit again next year. Jesse, however, knows the score: The Fitches owe more to the bank than the land is worth, but Silas swears everything will be fine. However, as determined as Silas is to stay on the land, he knows they need cash to stave off eviction, so he starts working with some locals that need an out-of-the-way farm to hide and smuggle illegal liquor. Jesse wants nothing to do with this arrangement, but Silas is willing to lie, cheat, or worse if it means staying on the land. Over the course of this historical novel, Blevens presents a compelling tale of hardship. Although the brothers are twins, they effectively act as foils to each other, and as they go about protecting their families in different ways, they manage to work with and against each other, by turns. There are vivid descriptions of the land (“He passed a cottonwood trunk, three feet in diameter with furrowed gray-brown bark, leaning over the river where the erosive wandering of the channel had robbed the tree of its tenuous clutch on the sandy bank”) and the Fitches’ hardships, making this work a journey into the past that readers can inhabit, and they’ll feel the family’s pain and loss as they experience it.

A vivid and often touching novel of the fragility of family bonds.