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Ashland
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16 March 2027

“Dan Simon’s family drama ponders life’s joys and losses using a patchwork of first-person narratives...A refreshingly meditative, modern Our Town with a hat tip to the blessings of nature, books, and writing.”—Christian Science Monitor
A deeply moving family story unfolding in richly evocative prose during the final decades of the American century, Ashland is a book of metamorphoses—of the dance between permanence and transformation.
Ashland, New Hampshire, is a mill town in the lakes region that has seen better days but whose inhabitants possess a capacity for resilience and spirit of quiet defiance. These qualities seem to find an echo in the harsh but beautiful natural world around them. Six voices animate the story at the heart of Ashland and give voice to the town itself. Carolyn is twenty years old and at a turning point in her life; Gordon the octogenarian who arrived in Ashland in the twilight of his years; Andy is a local boy; Geoff is Carolyn's writing teacher at Plymouth State; Edith, Gordon's wife, inadvertently becomes Carolyn's spiritual guide and friend; and Jennie, Carolyn's aunt, seems to offer her niece a model for how to live. But things aren't always what they seem.
Dan Simon’s debut novel brings to life six vivid characters and is both a tribute to the wild landscapes of New England and a lyrical ode to small-town America.
“Like a modern Thornton Wilder with a touch of Faulkner... With quiet lyricism and deep compassion, Simon brings to life the complexity, melancholy, and hope that are braided into the human spirit.”—Andrew Solomon, author of Far from the Tree
“It is often the stories that go unspoken which carry the most weight and influence in our lives. Dan Simon captures this ethos brilliantly in Ashland, his restrained prose belying the rich undercurrents of the characters who reside in this titular, halfway town. Simon is a bright, attentive new voice in the pastoral canon.”—Shannon Bowring, author of The Dalton Novels
★ “Multilayered and richly evocative... Powerfully poetic, this novel serves as a cross section of the Granite state, a testament to American virtues—and flaws.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred)
“A poetic, psychological, original take on the ways we are all affected and connected by how and where we live.”—Beverly Gologorsky, author of The Things We Do to Make It Home
“Ashland is remarkable for its range of acutely observed characters and its rich evocation of the landscape and weather of New Hampshire. Simon creates a tapestry of voices and tones with extraordinary skill and emotional resonance.”—Colm Tóibín, author of Brooklyn
“On the surface, the main characters in the novel lead fraught lives. Marriages don’t last. Women raise children without fathers present. Jobs don’t have much of a future. Life seems a matter of survival. But there’s much under that surface... The book is slowly revelatory, with continual moments of inspiration and knowledge found in nature, in people's comments, in the small moments of daily life.”—Shelf Awareness
“Simon... captures the rhythms of small-town New Hampshire in his lyrical debut novel.... This leaves a lasting impression.”—Publishers Weekly
“Dan Simon’s family drama ponders life’s joys and losses using a patchwork of first-person narratives from folks in small-town Ashland, New Hampshire. The novel is a refreshingly meditative, modern Our Town with a hat tip to the blessings of nature, books, and writing.”—Christian Science Monitor
“Dan Simon gives voice to characters we don’t see often enough in literature.”—Texas Public Radio
“This beautifully written, poetic literary novel tells the desperate story of quiet lives, or perhaps demonstrates Thoreau’s ‘The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation.’”—She Threads Softly
“Dan Simon’s debut novel blends polyphonic storytelling with keen attention to the natural world and its emotional echoes... Beyond its nuanced attention to landscape, Ashland also explores family life, its joys and loss, including teenage parenting, in compelling ways.”—The Arts Fuse