The Antidote, Karen Russell
The Antidote, Karen Russell
List: $25.00 | Sale: $17.50
Club: $12.50

The Antidote

Author: Karen Russell

Narrator: Elena Rey, Sophie Amoss, Mark Bramhall, Shayna Small, Jon Orsini, Natasha Soudek, Karen Russell, James Riding In

Unabridged: 16 hr 56 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/11/2025


Synopsis

NATIONAL BESTSELLER • THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW EDITORS' CHOICE • From Pulitzer finalist, MacArthur Fellowship recipient, and bestselling author of Swamplandia! and Vampires in the Lemon Grove Karen Russell: a gripping dust bowl epic about five characters whose fates become entangled after a storm ravages their small Nebraskan town

A Most Anticipated Book of 2025 from Lit Hub, Marie Claire, TIME, Vulture, Esquire, People, The Chicago Review of Books, and BookPage

The Antidote opens on Black Sunday, as a historic dust storm ravages the fictional town of Uz, Nebraska. But Uz is already collapsing—not just under the weight of the Great Depression and the dust bowl drought but beneath its own violent histories. The Antidote follows a "Prairie Witch,” whose body serves as a bank vault for peoples’ memories and secrets; a Polish wheat farmer who learns how quickly a hoarded blessing can become a curse; his orphan niece, a basketball star and witch’s apprentice in furious flight from her grief; a voluble scarecrow; and a New Deal photographer whose time-traveling camera threatens to reveal both the town’s secrets and its fate.

Russell's novel is above all a reckoning with a nation’s forgetting—enacting the settler amnesia and willful omissions passed down from generation to generation, and unearthing not only horrors but shimmering possibilities. The Antidote echoes with urgent warnings for our own climate emergency, challenging readers with a vision of what might have been—and what still could be.

About The Author

KAREN RUSSELL is the author of six works of fiction, including the New York Times bestsellers Swamplandia! and Vampires in the Lemon Grove. She is a MacArthur Fellow, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. She has received two National Magazine Awards for Fiction, the Shirley Jackson Award, the 2023 Bottari Lattes Grinzane prize, the 2024 Mary McCarthy Award, and was selected for the National Book Foundation's "5 under 35" prize and The New Yorker's "20 under 40" list (She is now decisively over 40). She has taught literature and creative writing at the Iowa Writers' Workshop, the University of California-Irvine, Williams College, Columbia University, and Bryn Mawr College, and was the Endowed Chair of Texas State’s MFA program. She serves on the board of Street Books, a mobile-library for people living outdoors. Born and raised in Miami, Florida, she now lives in Portland, Oregon with her husband, son, and daughter.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Ron on March 09, 2025

In 2011, Karen Russell cast a spell over readers with her uncanny debut novel, “Swamplandia!” She wasn’t kidding about that exclamation point. The story involves a plucky 13-year-old girl determined to revive her family’s alligator park. “Swamplandia!” went on to become a finalist for the Pulitzer Pr......more

Goodreads review by Anna on October 13, 2024

Excuse me while I walk around for the next several months running into doorframes thinking about this book. Karen Russell is an extraordinary writer, and this novel is worth the wait. I have no idea how she pulled off this alchemy, but she somehow did: she not only managed to write a gorgeous book a......more

Goodreads review by Debra on March 12, 2025

The Antidote is a sweeping tale that merges historical fiction with magical realism. The book begins with the devastating Black Sunday dust storm which devastated the fictional town of Uz, Nebraska. A town that is already coping with the Great Depression and the Dust bowl. It is a bleak place where......more

Goodreads review by Linda on April 11, 2025

I received a copy for review purposes. All opinions are honest and mine alone. Sixteen days - that’s how long it took me to read this 400 page book. It has pictures and a fair amount of white space so this is a very long time, especially for a book in the fiction genre. Granted, the subject is histor......more

Goodreads review by Kasa on November 26, 2024

When she was denied the Pulitzer despite being a finalist (in a year when that prize wasn't distributed at all), Karen Russell was unknown, young, but that was over ten years ago. With The Antidote, she firmly establishes her place at the forefront of American letters. She has created three powerhou......more


Quotes

"In The Antidote, Karen Russell writes indelible characters who keep choosing messy community over silo’d righteousness, motion over despair. She presents for inspection America’s most persistent chorus of moral self-defense, “Better them than us,” and shows how it rots the minds, hearts, and land of all who sing it. Only Karen Russell could write a dust bowl opus with such raucous brio—The Antidote soars with exigent joy and laugh-out-loud scenes, with memory witches and enchanted cameras and the world’s most lovable sentient scarecrow. It’s magic, a book doing this big work and also making it propulsive, eminently readable. If irony bypasses the difficulty of describing things, then the vivid sincerity on display here marks a virtuosic artist at the height of her lucidity. Russell has rendered with soul and urgency the vast inexpressible ache at the heart of American gratitude." —Kaveh Akbar, author of Martyr!

“Karen Russell runs her imaginative strings across dark caverns of our history so those spaces can sound their own songs. The Antidote lets us see the perils and possibilities of storytelling, illuminating its powers to erase, discover, reconstruct, prop up, terrorize, delight, and collapse. Russell is truly one of the greatest writers of our time. And then also: every page is pocked with joy, beauty, wildness and the perfect wisdom of mystery.” Rivka Galchen, author of Everyone Knows Your Mother Is a Witch

The Antidote is an achingly gorgeous book about dust, memory, basketball, murder, yearning, photography, and the way the land holds both the memory of what went before and the dreams of what may come. Karen Russell is one of our most humane and generous writers; this book is as profound as it is wonderfully strange.” Lauren Groff, author of The Vaster Wilds

“This novel swept me up and carried me away, even while somehow burying me, and digging up something about the story of this country I didn’t know I needed to know. As with all of Russell’s work, heaviness and levity are always kept in balance, and so I was lifted even while being devastated by the book’s many brutal truths and stark beauty. I’d already considered Russell’s vivid and inventive imagination to be endless, but here exploring a history of Nebraska we get an unearthing of this country’s still relatively untold origin story, the part about its original people, and the cost paid in order that this country might be formed. Finishing the book I felt completely covered in the forgotten dust of what too few look back on, with rare clarity, not to mention the intricate braid of narratives masterfully woven here. The Antidote is one, for an all too poisoned American narrative about land and family and belonging.” Tommy Orange, author of Wandering Stars

Here in The Antidote, Karen Russel has summoned her singular brand of alchemy and created an epic of heart and devastation, community and laughter, death and life. A book that has it all. An absolute wonder.” Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, author of Chain-Gang All-Stars

Russell’s prose is something to be savored. Every sentence is meticulously crafted, each one revealing layers of meaning that draw you deeper into the narrative. Her language is both lush and sharp, weaving a dreamlike quality into the story that makes the characters’ emotional journeys feel all the more visceral. Memory is both the poison and the cure here, something that simultaneously traps and liberates the characters. They move through their world with the weight of what’s unspoken pressing down on them. It’s a novel that asks the reader to sit with discomfort, to walk alongside its characters as they confront their unresolved histories. Russell navigates these emotional landscapes with care and respect and the distinct gift she carries that is heaven—I mean Love.” Morgan Talty, author of Fire Exit

"With The Antidote, Karen Russell proves once again that there is no limit to her extraordinary imagination. She creates marvels out of what we imagine to be the ordinary world, she turns the historical novel upside down and shakes from it a thing of exquisite beauty that is unlike anything you’ve ever read." Dinaw Mengestu, author of Someone Like Us

"While, thankfully, there is no such thing as The Great American Novel (singular), there is a body of work by various novelists which reckon with our past — its mythologies, its myriad histories, its tragedies, its secret archives and its future possibilities. The Antidote is a remarkable addition to this communal, never-ending project. Karen Russell’s novel is generous, profound, and will stay with me for a long time." —Kelly Link, author of The Book of Love

"The Antidote blends speculative and fantasy elements with rich language and vivid characters in an effort not to escape reality but to comment even more thoughtfully on it. . . . Russell’s lyrical writing dazzles on every page." The New York Times

"Spellbinding. . . . In The Antidote, Karen Russell, America's own Prairie Witch of a writer, exhumes memories out of the collective national unconscious and invites us to see our history in full. There are, alas, no antidotes for history. Our consolations are found in writers like Russell who refract horror and wonder through their own strange looking glass, leaving us energized for that next astounding thing.” NPR

“To embark on the adventure of reading The Antidote is to place yourself under the enchanting and challenging care of a writer who is guilty of actual witchcraft.” The Washington Post

“The most salient quality of The Antidote is the beauty and power of Russell’s writing. . . . The Antidote is clearly the work of a writer with prodigious gifts.” The Guardian

“Russell’s prose is as sharp as ever. Her capacity for detailed imagery while maintaining an easy, readable pace must be commended. Conceptually, her imagination stands head and shoulders above her peers, which is no surprise to any Karen Russell reader. . . . This book is wholly unique and represents one of the modern greats continuing to challenge herself.” Chicago Review of Books

“Drawing from her skills as a short story writer, [Russell] effortlessly weaves in other characters whose unique gifts shed light on the lacunae of history. . . . Her sharp narrative grasp guides the reader from character to character as the book unfolds.” Los Angeles Times

“A deeply imagined blend of gritty realism and alluring fantasy. . . . Russell has created both a tender story of how our memories sustain us in the face of significant loss and a frank reckoning with a painful period of American history.” Shelf Awareness

“A haunting novel that’s as speculative as it is timeless.” People Magazine

“A contribution to the continuing project of imagining the Dust Bowl, American immigration, and the New Deal, The Antidote is a strong and colorful antitoxin for rigid monochromal thinking.” —Arts Alive San Antonio

The Antidote is gorgeous and inventive storytelling, literature at its finest.” Willamette Week

"An ardent work of encompassing and compassionate historical fiction supercharged with her signature imaginative, astutely calibrated supernatural twists. A dramatic and uncanny tale of the drastic consequences of our destruction of nature and Indigenous communities." Booklist (starred review)

"A singular, haunting vision that fearlessly excavates the past and challenges the reader to face the future head-on. A storytelling tour de force that lives up to the promise of its name." Kirkus (starred review)

"An inspired and unforgettable fusion of the gritty and the fantastic."Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"Readers of Margaret Atwood, Emily St. John Mandel, Edan Lepucki, and Lidia Yuknavitch will appreciate Russell’s brilliant, barbed excavation of an all-too-imaginable future." Library Journal (starred review)