“On Brassard’s Farm kept me reading late into the night, for the pleasure of seeing the world through Ann Turner’s fine-grained consciousness. She’s as clear sighted when she looks within, ‘trying to fix what was wrong with me,’ as when she regards the stern beauty of the Vermont landscape she is trying to settle on. The grit and grace of daily life is on every page here, and watching Turner grow from someone who hopes to learn ‘a few self-sufficiency skills’ to full-fledged farmer is the kind of experience all readers search for and rarely find.” —Heidi Jon Schmidt, author of The House on Oyster Creek and The Harbormaster’s Daughter
“Daniel Hecht’s On Brassard’s Farm is as deeply engaging a novel as I have ever read. The prose is rich, musical, and smart. The characters are so compelling and valiant in their struggling, and the portrait of the farm, the landscape, and the land itself is so completely alive that it will break your heart at the same time it fills you with wonder and appreciation. Hecht is a brave and resourceful writer. Again and again, I was so surprised and moved by what these characters do and say and feel that I had to get up and walk around the house to absorb what I’d learned about them. This is a book that is profoundly real and magical. I can’t recommend it strongly enough.” —David Huddle, author of Only the Little Bone, The Story of a Million Years, and The Faulkes Chronicle
“Daniel Hecht’s story made me fall in love—with a hard land and a harder way of life, with tough women and noble men and the complex ecosystem that is the human family. In his hands, love is gritty and exhausting and the only thing powerful enough to keep us on our feet. In times of darkness, a story like this gives light, and strength, and hope.” —Laurie R. King, New York Times bestselling author of The Beekeeper’s Apprentice, Folly, and twenty-five other novels
“On Brassard’s Farm is at once a captivating love story and a profound portrait of existential despair and personal rebirth. Ann Turner, Hecht’s unsinkable heroine, manages to flourish on the bit of granite and earth she adopts as her own, but only by coming to see herself and the farm in ways she could never have imagined. Maybe not since Frost has a writer focused so intently and lucidly on the physics of farm life, the hidden armatures of cultivation and growth. Not only are miracles possible on Brassard’s farm, but—ironically enough—Vermont’s hardscrabble landscape comes to seem uniquely designed to deliver them. Truly an eye-opening tale.” —Philip Baruth, author of Senator Leahy: A Life in Scenes
“How might I persuade you to read On Brassard’s Farm? If I tell you that the words are made of breathable air, will you read it? Will you read it if I tell you that by breathing in these pages, you’ll find yourself climbing a tree in a forest past midnight knowing that your life will be forever altered if your feet touch ground again? I couldn’t put this novel down. I wish it never ended. It’s both real and visionary, old fashioned and prophetic. I’d like to sit in that tree a while longer with Annie, wondering how we got there. ” —Abby Frucht, award-winning author of A Well-Made Bed and Fruit of the Month
“[A] wondrous, unique love story…There is backbreaking labor, beauty, tragedy, and joy in this story of starting life again.” —Publishers Weekly
“Readers…will be drawn into Ann’s story and learn a lot about farming along the way.” —Booklist
“Hecht paints a picture of Ann’s life with documentary clarity, and his smooth prose is punctuated with keen observations on both humanity and the natural world….A beautifully written homage to a vanishing way of life and a moving story of love and connection.” —Library Journal (starred review)
“On Brassard’s Farm pulls from Hecht’s long affection for Vermont, the natural world, and the role of agriculture in our working landscape…[Ann] Turner’s struggle is a hard look at how the world has become difficult, hectic, and more demanding.” —Times Argus (Vermont)
“A deeply personal prose elegy on how working one’s land and tending one’s animals can transform the spirit…Hecht’s terrific capacity for natural description and personal epiphany bring this book and its characters vividly to life, and I cannot recommend it enough.” —Bill Schubart, author of Lila & Theron
“The characters…grab you, and the farm is so well described it almost joins the cast…Narrator Flanagan has one of those voices you could listen to all day. She sounds down to earth and you can easily hear despair, longing, and exhaustion in her performance.” —Christian Science Monitor (audio review)
“Voice actor Flanagan’s solid performance adds heart to the audio edition of Hecht’s novel…Flanagan does an outstanding job.” —Publishers Weekly (audio review)