A barn burner of love and longing,Enough to Lose delivers gut-punch stories over and over, each one studded with fierce insights about class and family and rural living and rendered in tender, electric prose.
~Karen Tucker
Enough to Lose is compulsively readable. Like Denis Johnson, Richard Russo, and Daniel Woodrell, Deeren's stories reflect the often brutal reality of working-class, rural life, punctuated by moments of beauty and brilliance. Filled with nuance, Enough to Lose prompts readers to think about the humanity of those who might have experiences vastly different than their own.
~Donald Quist
Reader, be prepared, as you open Enough to Lose, RS Deeren's wonderful debut short story collection, to enter a world—in this case the thumb of Michigan—that's as vividly and evocatively detailed as any in contemporary fiction.
~Larry Watson
"RS Deeren's riveting first collection, written in the vein of Jim Harrison, Bonnie Jo Campbell, and Breece D'J Pancake, spotlights rural Michigan in all of its variegated beauty and pathos. Deeren's years as a substitute teacher, landscaper, and lumberjack perhaps contributed to the visceral quality of this fresh new work. The people in these stories often struggle to make it, but the struggle here feels real and true. Deeren's unflinching yet empathetic attention fosters a human connection between the reader and the characters in these stories that outpaces the heartbreak and renders this book a must-read."
~Kelly Fordon
"This book is the best thing I've read lately, with its dead-on depictions of rural life, both beautiful and heart-wrenching. With its floods, guns, car wrecks, dangerous bridges, bars that 'stay open out of habit,' there's a lot at stake here. Deeren is a keen observer of what age, poverty, and bad luck can do to a body: forty-five is, he says, 'the age where you'll have enough to lose that you'll lose yourself in the process of trying to hold onto everything.' Some of his characters live so close to the edge that the failure of a freezer might mean going hungry, while others move closer to the edge to feel alive or to grieve fully. If you say these characters are stubbornly behind the times, it's because they are not buying what America is offering them—they are holding out for something better and more meaningful. They have tasted the sweetness of romantic love, they have felt in their bones the elegance of a deer crossing a river. Deeren's strong, sure, authentic voice sings the songs of Michigan, and you should listen."
~Bonnie Jo Campbell