ONCE YOU BREAK A KNUCKLE
Set in the remote Kootenay Valley in western Canada, Once You Break a Knuckle tells stories of good people doing bad things: two bullied adolescents sabotage a rope swing, resulting in another boy’s death; a heartbroken young man refuses to warn his best friend about an approaching car; sons challenge fathers and break taboos. Crackling with tension and propelled by jagged, cutting dialogue, the stories interconnect and reveal to us how our best intentions are doomed to fail or injure, how our loves can fall short or mislead us, how even friendship–especially friendship–can be something dangerously temporary.
Wilson’s world is always dangerous, barbed with violence and the possibility of betrayal. And yet, in this small, finely-wrought universe, a dogged, wry dignity is usually enough to see us through.
An intoxicating alloy of adrenaline and the kind of vulnerability we would all admit to if we were honest, Once You Break a Knuckle is about the courage it takes just to make it through the day.
“Canada has a potent new voice in D.W. Wilson. Robust, musical, slyly funny, and shining a fearless light into the yearning male heart, these powerful stories should be required reading for any curious females of the species.”
—Bill Gaston
“The cover blurb, for once, nails it. There are indeed echoes of Richard Ford and Raymond Carver here — most strikingly Carver, in content certainly — but Wilson’s description and dialogue also attain the same lean, elemental punch, a total and exhilarating exclusion of the extraneous.“
—The Globe and Mail
D.W. Wilson was born and raised in the small towns of the Kootenay Valley, British Columbia. He is the recipient of the University of East Anglia's inaugural Man Booker Prize Scholarship - the most prestigious award available to students in the MA program. His stories have appeared in literary magazines across Canada, Ireland, and the United Kingdom, including The Malahat Review, Grain, and Southword. In 2011 he won the BBC National Short Story Award, along with being shortlisted for the CBC Short Story Prize and the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize. He lives in London.
