The Sisters Brothers
- Publisher
- House of Anansi Press Inc
- Initial publish date
- Apr 2013
- Category
- Literary
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9781770890275
- Publish Date
- May 2011
- List Price
- $18.95
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781770893351
- Publish Date
- Apr 2013
- List Price
- $14.95
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781770890329
- Publish Date
- Oct 2011
- List Price
- $23.99
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9780887842894
- Publish Date
- May 2011
- List Price
- $29.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Out of print
This edition is not currently available in bookstores. Check your local library or search for used copies at Abebooks.
Description
Winner of the Governor General’s Award for Fiction, the Rogers Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize, and the Stephen Leacock Medal, the Prix des libraires du Quebec and shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize, the Scotiabank Giller Prize, and a #1 national bestseller, The Sisters Brothers is a violent, lustful, hung-over and hilarious odyssey through the underworld of the 1850s frontier.
Hermann Kermit Warm is going to die: Eli and Charlie Sisters can be counted on for that. Though Eli has never shared his brother’s penchant for whiskey and killing, he’s never known anything else. On the road to Warm’s gold-mining claim outside San Francisco — and from the back of his long-suffering one-eyed horse — Eli struggles to make sense of his life without abandoning the job he’s sworn to do.
Award-winning and critically acclaimed author Patrick deWitt doffs his hat to the classic Western, and then transforms it into a comic tour-de-force with an unforgettable narrative voice that captures all the absurdity, melancholy, and grit of the West — and of these two brothers, bound to each other by blood and scars and love.
About the author
Patrick deWitt was born on Vancouver Island in 1975. He is the author of two critically acclaimed novels: Ablutions and The Sisters Brothers, which won the Governor General’s Literary Award for Fiction, the Rogers Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize, and the Stephen Leacock Medal, and was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize and the Scotiabank Giller Prize. He lives in Portland, Oregon.
Awards
- Long-listed, IMPAC Dublin Literary Award
- Winner, Prix des libraires du Quebec
- Winner, Stephen Leacock Memorial Medal
- Short-listed, Walter Scott Prize
- Winner, Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Book Award
- Short-listed, Google Play International Author of the Year
- Short-listed, CBA Libris Award: Author of the Year
- Short-listed, CBC Bookie Awards: Literary Fiction
- Winner, Oregon Book Awards: Ken Kesey Award for Fiction
- Winner, CBA Libris Award: Fiction Book of the Year
- Winner, Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize
- Commended, Publishers Weekly Best Book
- Commended, Quill and Quire Book of the Year
- Commended, Amazon.ca Best Books: Canadian Fiction
- Short-listed, Man Booker Prize for Fiction
- Commended, Maclean's Magazine Best Books
- Commended, Globe and Mail Top 100 Book
- Short-listed, Scotiabank Giller Prize
- Commended, Toronto Star Reviewers' Top 100 Books
- Commended, Amazon.ca Best Books: Editors' Pick
- Winner, Governor General's Literary Award: Fiction
Editorial Reviews
Bursting with vitality and driven along by a terrific pulpy energy, The Sisters Brothers is the kind of book you may well end up wholeheartedly recommending to friends.
Herald Scotland
I doubt very much I'll read a funnier, more original book than this picaresque, Wild West tale . . . a terrifically spun yarn . . . masterfully strange and wonderful . . .
Toronto Star
. . . original, entrancing and entertaining . . .
Denver Post
[Patrick deWitt] has taken the typical saga and, with laser-sharp prose, masterful storytelling, and an eccentrically perfect combination of humor, violence, lust, and pathos, has turned it completely upside-down. Never has the Old West seemed so simultaneously and page-turningly beautiful, tragic, and comedic, or a cowboy so delightfully neurotic.
Charlotte Viewpoint
. . . [an] unsettling, compelling and deeply strange picaresque novel.
Independent
. . . edgy and unyielding . . . The Sisters Brothers gives readers a sense of adventure without ever having to stare down the barrel of a gun.
Weekender
DeWitt’s inspired, many-layered yarn is as entertaining and as stylistically accomplished as it is unsettling and most original in its revisiting of what remains a glorious genre.
Irish Times
The Sisters Brothers is a bloody, nightmarish frontier road trip that seems at times like something out of Cormac McCarthy, yet somehow merges laughter and hope with suffering, death and betrayal. [...] Like an alchemist, deWitt has refined and purified the base metals of black comedy and the western to produce literary gold.
Winnipeg Free Press
[Patrick deWitt] frequently crosses into comic territory to produce a story that's weirdly funny, startlingly violent and steeped in sadness.
Washington Post
. . . a darkly comic, compelling and surprising story . . . I doubt I'll find a more entertaining and thoughtful novel this year.
Uptown Winnipeg
. . . imaginative and ebullient . . . revels in the hilarious life and times of two gunslingers, Eli and Charlie Sisters.
Boston Globe
In The Sisters Brothers, a diabolical combination of Laurel and Hardy and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (with a touch of Don Quixote and Sancho Panza, just to emphasise the high literary stakes) deWitt has ensured another unforgettable pair their place in fictive lore.
Telegraph
... sheer brilliance ...
Chatelaine
. . . comic . . . engaging . . . the brothers' poetic banter and the book’s bracing bursts of violence keep this campfire yarn pulled taut.
Onion AV Club
[Patrick] DeWitt has produced a genre-bending frontier saga that is exciting, funny, and perhaps unexpectedly, moving.
Publishers Weekly
. . . a witty noir version of Don Quixote . . . hugely entertaining.
Financial Times
There is something irresistibly cinematic about this quirky tale, a Coen brothers-style strangeness that paradoxically celebrates an unlikely humanity.
Edmonton Journal
Violent, funny and strangely touching, [The Sisters Brothers is] destined for a spot on many best-of-2011 lists.
Edmonton Journal
Patrick deWitt has written an Old West tale that conjures up the colourful images of a spaghetti western filled with stark realism, eccentric characters and black humour . . . If you’re looking for an unforgettable western, grab this one.
Monday Magazine
DeWitt has invigorated [the] well-worn path [of the classic Western] with wit, style, and imagination.
New West
Wandering his Western landscape with the cool confidence of a practiced pistoleer, deWitt's steady hand belies a hair trigger, a poet's heart and an acute sense of gallows humor . . . It's easy to imagine John C. Reilly - who is set to star in the film version of the book - lumbering through this breezy, pitch-black comedy's cinematic scenes.
Time Out New York
So subtle is deWitt's prose, so slyly note-perfect his rendition of Eli's voice in all its earnestly charming 19th-century syntax, and so compulsively readable his bleakly funny western noir story, that readers will stick by Eli even as he grinds his heel into the shattered skull of an already dead prospector.
Maclean's
. . . smooth and seamless, shot through with dark humor . . . as easy to slip into as the old HBO series 'Deadwood.'
LA Times
. . . darkly hilarious . . . riveting . . . deWitt welcomingly reimagines the [Western] genre.
ZYZZYVA
. . . a book that’s both a heck of a lot of fun to read and surprisingly compelling when it ends -- one that both your hipster brother and your straight-arrow dad will get a kick out of.
Wisconsin Capital-Times
. . . hilarious, dark, twisted and compelling.
Canada Arts Connect Magazine
. . . fresh, hilariously anti-heroic, often genuinely chilling, and relentlessly compelling. Yes, this is a mighty fine read, and deWitt a mighty fine writer.
National Post
. . . cinematic, wry and mannered . . . DeWitt['s] ability to distill an image with a couple of well-chosen words and the precision and intensity of his language gives [The] Sisters [Brothers] a dreamlike aura.
Philadelphia City Paper
. . . gritty . . . deadpan . . . very comedic . . . opens new doors in the imagination.
New York Times Book Review
. . . gory, mesmerizing . . . carries a strong echo of Pulp Fiction . . . seduces us to its characters, and draws us on the strength of deWitt's subtle, nothing-wasted prose.
Cleveland Plain Dealer
. . . spirited and often humorous . . . Patrick deWitt's picaresque narrative works with a wink and a nod of reverence, squaring with recent revivals of the Western in popular culture, namely HBO's Deadwood.
Oregonian
America seems anything but beautiful in Patrick DeWitt’s quirky and ultimately touching new novel The Sisters Brothers.
Anniston Star
. . . a lushly voiced picaresque story . . . It's a kind of True Grit told by Tom Waits.
Esquire
. . . wryly comic, heartbreakingly sentimental, and immensely likable . . .
Georgia Straight
The Sisters Brothers is a bold, original and powerfully compelling work, grounded in well-drawn characters and a firm hold on narrative. When they say “They don’t write em like that anymore,” they’re wrong.
Globe and Mail
The Sisters Brothers has a cadence and flow to its prose and the reader can almost hear Eli's laconic narration as the pages turn . . . here is a hardcover that practically holds a Colt to your head and growls: read me.
Winnipeg Review
Fully invested, DeWitt is a hilarious, wry wordsmith and a masterful storyteller. The Sisters Brothers, with its sharp edges and instinctive compassion, is far from historical displacement or genre escapism. It is art worthy of the status, regardless of context or -ism.
Rover Arts