"Nopalito, Texas is the kind of book that rarely garners much attention, but should. Its linked stories create a fictional world more bustling than that of most novels, and its characters, both gay and straight, are more authentic and more sympathetic."
– Dale Boyer, G&LR
The setting--replete with eight-cylinder cars, home perms, butane stoves, Buddy Holly glasses--is midcentury modern. It's 1955 in Nopalito, Texas, yet given the dearth of options for a girl who hopes to never be husbanded, and for a flibbertigibbet boy whose hands fly like birds when he talks, it might be 1855. These stories illuminate the other side of silence where words don't exist for desires that run counter to established norms. David Meischen's homespun but gorgeous words coalesce in a lush yet subtle style. Even bit players burdened with secret truth contemplate the world with attention to detail so tender it turns ordinary objects into sites of revelation. In this backwater outpost where everyone knows everyone, no one knows anyone. Each story is devastatingly beautiful and the book, more than a sum of its parts, is a consummate work of art.--Debra Monroe, author of It Takes a Worried Woman
The linked stories of Nopalito, Texas feel artfully distilled yet also boundless. As the characters grow older, they intersect in ways both surprising and deeply satisfying. This stunning collection, full of lyrical prose and deep compassion, belongs in the Texan canon.--Stacey Swann, author of Olympus, Texas: A Novel
The linked stories of Nopalito, Texas feel artfully distilled yet also boundless. As the characters grow older, they intersect in ways both surprising and deeply satisfying. This stunning collection, full of lyrical prose and deep compassion, belongs in the Texan canon.--Stacey Swann, author of Olympus, Texas: A Novel
In this tremendous collection, David Meischen renders entire lives with extraordinary depth, breadth, and care. Like Alice Munro and Andrea Barrett, Meischen conveys the significance of the present moment by laying bare what has come before. Nopalito, Texas: Stories is a book to savor, and this is a writer to cherish.--Bret Anthony Johnston, author of Remember Me Like This: A Novel