Claire Vaye Watkins is the author of Battleborn, winner of the Story Prize, the Rosenthal Family Foundation Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and a Silver Pen Award from the Nevada Writers Hall of Fame. Battleborn was named a Best Book of 2012 by the San Francisco Chronicle, Boston Globe, Time Out New York, and Flavorwire, and a Best Short Story Collection by NPR.org. In 2012, the National Book Foundation named Claire one of the 5 Best Writers Under 35. Her stories and essays have appeared in Granta, One Story, The Paris Review, Ploughshares, Glimmer Train, Best of the West 2011, Best of the Southwest 2013, and elsewhere. A graduate of the University of Nevada Reno and the Ohio State University, Claire has received fellowships from the Writers’ Conferences at Sewanee and Bread Loaf. An assistant professor at Bucknell University, Claire is also the co-director, with Derek Palacio, of the Mojave School, a free creative writing workshop for teenagers in rural Nevada.
Praise for Gold Fame Citrus:
"A beautiful debut novel . . Watkins' vision is profoundly
terrifying. It's a novel that's effective precisely because it's so
realistic — while Watkins' image of the future is undeniably dire,
there's nothing about it that sounds implausible. . . She also
writes with a keen understanding of human nature, both good and
bad. She has a genuine compassion for the Angelenos who have chosen
to remain in their dying, desiccated city as well as for the ones
who have evacuated. . .The prose in Gold Fame Citrus is
stunningly beautiful, even when — especially when — Watkins is
describing the badlands that Southern California has become…One
might think there are only a few ways to portray a landscape that
has become, essentially, nothing, but Watkins writes with a brutal
kind of beauty, and even in the book's darkest moments, it's
impossible to turn away. It's an urgent, frequently merciless book,
as unrelenting as it is brilliant. Watkins forces us to confront
things we'd probably rather ignore, but because we're human, we
can't.” -Los Angeles Times
"[Gold Fame Citrus] burns with a dizzying, scorching genius.”
-Vanity Fair
“Watkin’s narrative is mythic and speculative, its sediment forming
and re-forming in lists, treatises, and reports. The writing, with
its tough sentimentality, is reminiscent of Denis Johnson’s, but
Watkins has a style of mordant observation all her own.”
-Harper's
"A searing debut novel…Watkins is a master of tantalizing
details…You can feel the grit in your teeth as this thirsty little
family drives across an ocean of sand without a map or a prayer."
-Washington Post
“With razor-sharp language and an eye for the devastating detail,
the author conjures up a harrowing alternative to the former glory
of the Golden State . . .her descriptions . . . achieve a kind of
spooky poetry . . .Watkins never loses sight of Ray and Luz’s
tender humanity, rendering their predicament with an abundance of
empathy, insight and wit, all of which is what makes Gold Fame
Citrus a winner.” -San Francisco Chronicle
“One of the best depictions of contemporary California you’re
likely to find outside of Steinbeck.” -BOMB
“Gold Fame Citrus is a sun-struck apocalyptic road trip of the
California dream. . . working at the intersection between history
and myth, reality and sheer imagination. And, refreshingly and
believably, it’s often very, very funny. . . This is not the
nameless desolation of The Road, but a wildly vivid, arid
world, radically altered and populated with characters whose
multiple narratives propel the story.” -Vogue
“At once beautiful and profoundly unsettling, [Gold Fame Citrus]
sears its way into the brain, burning hot through the devastating
journey and lingering long after the last page is turned.”
-Elle
“Watkins writes in a torrent, her language flooding the psychedelic
landscapes of her ruined California. It’s a book that could prove
prophetic, and one already terrifyingly expressive of our cultural
moment in which the slow-motion disaster of Western drought — a
disaster more than a century in the making — has finally become
un-ignorably visible… The achievement of [Gold Fame Citrus], as
with the best apocalyptic fictions, is to make slow violence
visible — to bring before our eyes the consequences of the
invisible violence we do, and have done, to our lands and to
ourselves." – Los Angeles Review of Books
"Watkins' vision — not just of a world broken by ecological
disaster, but of the sorts of people who would thrive in that world
— is mercilessly sharp. She's got a knife eye for details, a
vicious talent for cutting to the throbbing vein of animal
strangeness that scratches inside all of us." -NPR
“Claire Vaye Watkins’s extraordinary debut novel, Gold Fame Citrus
is set in a terrifying plausible future… [and] explores the
power of both the natural world and mythmaking. The novel is in
fact filled with seekers: people with a thirst not just for water,
but also for purpose and faith. In that sense, Gold Fame Citrus is
finally a religious story, a particularly American one—giving voice
to the pioneer’s faith in self-invention.” -O, The Oprah
Magazine
“[An] ambitious debut novel… [that] evokes the madness, glory, and
opportunism of the desert with stunning lyrical flair.” –Portland
Oregonian
"Gold Fame Citrus features some of the meatiest sentences I’ve read
in recent memory.” -The Frisky
“All the strength and utility of “Gold Fame Citrus” come from the
unrelentingness of its author’s well-schooled gaze…[T]hat gaze
encompasses more than tragedy, more than the chaos of
civilization’s gradual collapse. It also shares with us the
feverish glow of a world lit only by fugitives’ fires, the
hallucinatory shimmer surrounding each individual grain of
pulverized stone, each tiny tributary to an overwhelming flood of
uncontrollable forces: heat, wind, dreams.” –Seattle
Times
“Vivid and disturbing… a welcome addition to emerging ‘cli-fi’
genre . . . Watkins’ novel will certainly rank among this
year’s most acclaimed.” -i09
“Gold Fame Citrus transcends genre. It’s part bestiary, part
cautionary tale, part omniscient mosaic—occasionally collective,
often phantasmagoric…a postmodern post-apocalyptic masterpiece…
[and] a watermark of what artists are capable of as we face climate
change… This book begins with devastation, and what it
becomes—vindication, vindictiveness, resurrection, ruination—is
transcendent.” -Southern Humanities Review
“A work of admirable scope and enviable talent. . . . Watkins has
crafted a powerful, innovative and hallucinatory novel from a bleak
yet all-too-real vision.” -Minneapolis Star-Tribune
“There’s no doubt that Watkins is wildly talented. Her prose often
shimmers. . . . [and she] has an undeniably original voice
that’s as hard-edged as the desert Los Angeles that anchors this
first novel.” -Boston Globe
“An electrifying debut novel…Watkins' prose sizzles... Just as she
turns a familiar landscape into a mysterious and foreboding
geography, Watkins breathes new life into words we thought we knew
well. Gold Fame Citrus will hypnotize you like a dream, and make
you want to take a big swig of the water we have left.” -Mother
Jones
"Watkins’...[has a] gift for creating a world entire, from its
landscape to its pop culture...[but] my favorite aspect of Gold
Fame Citrus and the reason why I’ll keep reading everything
Watkins writes no matter its premise, is the way she portrays the
Western landscape as complicit in the shaping of its people,
history and ethos." -Dallas Morning News
"Claire Vaye Watkins’ first novel is both an anti-myth and a legend
in the making...With a melody both lonely and sonorous, Gold Fame
Citrus is a love song for the desert and its bewitching undertow.”
--Ploughshares
"Prophecy lands differently when it comes in the form of a
dazzlingly smart, brave, and nuanced novel . . . The world is not
ending, the world is changing, and it’s works like Gold Fame Citrus
that can help us articulate literature’s place in the larger
conversation.” -Full Stop
“[Watkins’] first novel is a stick of dynamite in an arid desert,
placed with deliberation, scorching nearly every other book in its
path… It’s an apocalyptic fantasia written with a keen familiarity
of the eerie, harsh landscapes of the desert. It is well worth your
time.” -Gawker
"Brutal and beautiful, Gold Fame Citrus immediately
establishes itself as a dystopian masterpiece.” -Bookriot
“In feverish prose, Watkins summons up a Southwest desiccated and
mostly deserted… [it's] worth reading merely for the beauty
of Watkins' language, the specificity of her imagery and the acuity
of her observations." -Orlando Weekly
"Watkins’ world is both new and unfamiliar. . . where it does
subvert the paradigm is in the reversal of a tale of the land as a
male story. The landscape of Watkins’ novel is undeniably female,
not only in its symbols—Luz, her mother and Ig— but in [her]
phantasmagoric imaginings." -Salon
“This splendid debut novel is really a reinvigorated version of the
classic tales of settlement on the American frontier…Watkins
potently evokes the nightmarish. . . and the spectacular. . .
The pulpy drama . . . is always engaging. But it’s the
naturalistic portrait of an American Southwest in extremis that
makes Gold Fame Citrus stand out.” -The Wall Street
Journal
“So deliciously, devastatingly good, I want to melt it down and sip
it through a straw." -Buzzfeed Books
"Stunning." -Steamboat Today
“Watkins writes in prose that borders on poetry, capturing both the
hardness and the beauty of her imagined landscape in ways that make
each page of her novel sing with a sense of place… a moving
American epic that explores the role stories, place and our closest
relationships serve in shaping our selves.” –Shelf Awareness
“Sharp and provocative…Watkins is a magnificent writer.”
-Newsday
“[Watkins’] feverish, heat-addled language…brings to life the
beginning of the world’s last days in ways that are both
frightening and beautiful… Gold Fame Citrus is thoroughly
captivating and haunting, just as all sinister prophecies should
be.” –Philadelphia Inquirer
"A blockbuster novel." -Entertainment Weekly
"[Gold Fame Citrus] sparkles with weird, disturbing beauty...an
impressive debut." -Santa Fe New Mexican
"A blistering tour de force." -Think Progress
"[A] luminous debut novel." -BookPage
“A stunning read, its language rich and complex, and its story
frightening and poignant.” -Hello Giggles
“Instantly entrancing, alluring as a mirage, and filled with peril,
mystery, sandstorms, the occult, and a cast of nuanced characters.”
-Los Angeles Magazine
"Scarily timely." -The Hollywood Reporter
"Gold Fame Citrus walks a fine line with balletic grace. As brutal
a portrait of nature as it is, it never acts like a clarion
call for change or a scolding treatise about
conservation...page-turning." -Arizona Republic
“Watkins’s imagination and ingenuity are astounding…. Where many
futuristic novels settle for the menace of the unknown…Gold Fame
Citrus is intimate with the history of disaster. Watkins traces the
past onto her landscape and her characters with permanent ink…A
cautionary environmental vision [and] unflinching critique of our
need to believe in myths (especially about each other) when hope
seems lost.” –Barnes & Noble Review
"A glaring speculation into a future that doesn't seem quite so
unthinkable...moving and original.” -Pop Sugar
“Watkins is at her best here, characterizing the easy slide from
isolation to the open arms of an accepting, if ultimately wayward,
community. . . Gold Fame Citrus is a different kind of
dystopia; one that illuminates the spiritual coping mechanisms of
those living in an apocalyptic wasteland.” -Huffington Post
“A gripping, provocative debut novel.” -Boston Globe
“Watkins is at her most vivid when she takes the role of
anthropologist, tracing the residual effects of the desert that
swallowed the state. She nails, with a thoroughness edging on
cynicism, the human interest stories churned out by journalists
visiting the desert’s last stoic and doomed townships." -The New
Republic
“Think Joan Didion meets JG Ballard, with a dash of Mad
Max.” -Vice
"Watkins’s prose is gritty and tender, and her lush writing paints
a terrifying and moving picture of what it would mean to navigate a
waterless world.” -Travel and Leisure
“An enthralling debut novel… [Watkins] is an interpreter for the
Californian dream… [as well as] remarkably attuned to the
resentment outsiders often feel toward residents. . . Watkins . .
.captures California’s peculiar magic, the wild and beautiful hope
that has attracted people.” -Slate
“Watkins's language and story—at times saturated with chimeric
imagery, at others with environmental backstory—never feels cooled
by the long shadows her literary forebears cast. . . The startling
nowness of Watkins's novel doesn't dilute its cataclysmic premise,
but rather ups its voltage.” –Slant Magazine
“Watkins has proven herself capable of synthesizing the
contradictions of the American West—its sublime, strange, gorgeous,
and grisly elements—into fiction that is compelling and
smart.” -Public Culture
A "Book We're Reading" -Marie Claire
"Watkins is a ridiculously talented writer... so it’s no
surprise at all that her first novel...has already received
unanimous raves…Gold Fame Citrus is one book I will happily shell
out hardcover money for the second it comes out.” -The Gloss
"Watkins’ writing is hypnotic, drawing readers into a fevered
lullaby that feels fantastical and all too-real simultaneously.
This is the kind of novel that readers will want to consume in
great gulps ...but Gold Fame Citrus is best read slowly, allowing
the words to wash over you.” -BookPage
"Sure to cement the young writer’s literary reputation.” -San
Antonio Express-News
“Watkins has written a gorgeous and gripping book, rich with detail
and psychological insight.” -Vegas Seven
"Psychedelic and scarily real...Watkins knows that if you want to
save the world, you first have to make readers care about saving
the humans.” -Entertainment Weekly
“Riveting.. .Watkins is a sharp-eyed portraitist with the instincts
of a master storyteller. . . even her minor characters leap
off the page…a powerful new voice in American literature.” –The
Millions
"A promising new writer ...one to watch. Watkins’ great achievement
here is her vivid imagination in creating this world where
desolation mixes with nostalgia and hope.” -Wichitia Review
“A tour-de-force first novel blisters with drought, myth, and
originality….On each page [Watkins] spikes her novel with a
ticking, musical intelligence… Praised for writing landscape,
Watkins’ grasp of the body is just as rousing. Into the vast desert
she sets loose snakes and gurus, the Messianic pulse of end times.
Critics will reference Annie Proulx’s bite and Joan Didion’s
hypnotic West, but Watkins is magnificently
original.” –Kirkus (starred)
“Spectacular… In Margaret Atwood mode, Watkins spikes this
fast-moving, high-tension, sexyecocrisis saga with caustic parodies
and resounding allusions that cohere into a knowing and
elegiac tale of scrappy adaptation and epic loss.”
–Booklist (starred)
“Packed with persuasive detail, luminous writing, and a grasp of
the history (popular, political, natural and imagined) needed to
tell a story that is original yet familiar, strange yet all too
believable.” –Publisher's Weekly (starred)
"In her powerful depictions of the scorched and merciless
landscape, Watkins realizes a genuine nostalgia for our lost living
world, and the American West in particular...[W]ith its damaged and
complicated heroine and multiple voices, shifting perspectives, and
unconventional narrative devices, [Gold Fame Citrus] is a wholly
original work."– Library Journal (starred)
“Exhilarating, upsetting, delirious, bold, Gold Fame Citrus is a
head rush of a novel and establishes Claire Vaye Watkins as an
important new voice in American literature.” –Louise Erdrich,
author of The Round House
"An extraordinary novel: relentlessly brilliant, utterly fearless,
and often savagely funny. Watkins explores the maze of human thirst
in all its forms. Here's a love story that tracks the mutating
hopes of two lost souls, in prose that is fever-bright and
ferociously assured, against the backdrop of the Great American
Desert. More confirmation that Watkins is one of the brightest
stars in our firmament."
--Karen Russell, author of Swamplandia!
“Gold Fame Citrus is a sun-hammered fever dream, not unlike the
shimmering, sweltering Southwest it depicts. Your heart will be
wrung out by the journey of Luz, Raymond, and Ig. Your imagination
will feast on the assured depiction of a near-future that is burnt
to a crisp. And you’ll hope it’s all a mirage as Watkins renders a
hot and very plausible future with the frightening force of a
burning inevitability.”
--Smith Henderson, author of Fourth of July Creek
“An unforgettable journey into a hauntingly imagined
near-future. With her mind-bending vision, breathtaking
storytelling and utterly original voice, Claire Vaye Watkins is one
of my favorite writers.” – Ruth Ozeki, author of A Tale for the
Time Being
“A gripping, audacious novel, plausibly imagined in all its
remarkable details. With Claire Vaye Watkins there was never
promise: it was achievement from the start, and this book repays
her admirers in spades."
--Thomas McGuane, author of Crow Fair
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