The Oregon Experiment The Oregon Experiment

The Oregon Experiment

    • 4.3 • 4 Ratings
    • $7.99
    • $7.99

Publisher Description

East Coast transplants to small-town Oregon, Naomi and Scanlon Pratt are at the threshold of a new life. Scanlon has a position at the local university—teaching mass movements and domestic radicalism—and Naomi, a fragrance designer whose sense of smell has inexplicably vanished, is pregnant with their first child.

For Scanlon, all of this is ideal, from impending fatherhood to the chance for professional vindication. The Pacific Northwest provides ample opportunities for field research, and almost immediately he finds a subject in Clay, a troubled young anarchist who despises Scanlon’s self-serving attempts at friendship but adores Naomi. He also becomes involved with a regional secessionist group and—despite his better judgment—with its leader, a sensuous free spirit called Sequoia.

Naomi, while far less enchanted with these radically different surroundings, discovers that Oregon has something to offer her as well: an extraordinary world of scents. Her acutely sensitive nose is somehow revived, though she certainly doesn’t like everything she’s smelling. And as the Pratts welcome their newborn son, their lives become so deeply entwined with Clay’s that they must soon decide exactly where their loyalties lie, before the increasingly volatile activism that Scanlon has been dabbling in engulfs them all.

A contemporary civil war between desire and betrayal, rich in crisp, luxuriant detail, The Oregon Experiment explores a minefield of convictions and complications at once political, social, and intimately personal.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2011
June 14
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
352
Pages
PUBLISHER
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
SELLER
Penguin Random House LLC
SIZE
2.8
MB

Customer Reviews

Cyndie Sue ,

Most unsympathetic cast of characters since Mad Men

The author accurately captures the scent of Oregon. As a 40 year transplant who lives in the "Yaquina" area, I could see and smell the Oregon Experiment as each page was turned. The characters continued to be developed as the story progressed, but I found myself less sympathetic to each one as I learned more about them. Feel like these were mostly people I wouldn't want to spend time with even though it took me months of enforced reading to get through to the end. Mr. Scribner is a talented author, I just didn't like the characters enough by the end to care what became of them.
Cynthia Arnold

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