'Beneath the deceptively calm surface of these spare and beautiful stories, mad passions boil. There is a transatlantic tradition of studying the interaction between men and nature, in such figures as Hemingway, Carver, McGuane; now Keevil extends and enriches that lineage. He truly is that good.' --Niall Griffiths (author of Grits, Runt, and Kelly & Victor) 'Keevil's Tokes from the Wild is an assured story of a city boy who follows his friend into the countryside to spend a summer tree planting, which soon degenerates into a mess of weed smoke and recriminations.' --The Short Review 'Tyler Keevil's Carving Through Woods on a Snowy Evening tells of a snowboarder, missing on a mountainside not long after an accident, being tracked by hopeful rescuers. Carving has...storytelling rich in symbolism; subtle plot devices; and an ending that opens and sings.' --New Welsh Review 'There's real quality in Tyler Keevil's gripping tale of mountain rescue, Carving Through Woods on a Snowy Evening.' --The Western Mail 'I read Tyler's amazing story Sealskin and was blown away. Beautiful writing...stunning' --Miriam Toews, author of All My Puny Sorrows 'Vividly told in muscular prose, Keevil's stories are compelling evocations of isolation and strength in an often unforgiving landscape.' --Carys Bray, author of A Song for Issy Bradley 'Burrard Inlet is, first and foremost, a collection of short stories that tries to recognise the relationship between humans and nature through separate human identities...This is a piece of work that, without a doubt, should be added to a book-shelf of short-story lovers and novel aficionados alike.' --Wales Arts Review 'The masculine, often unforgiving scenarios which unfold here are a suitable fit for Keevil's economical - if elegant phrasing, but a strong moral core is ever-present, and sometimes vindication for the downtrodden.' --Buzz Magazine 'Sealskin is a stunner: straightforward and unadorned, but humming with subsurface power. Possessed of a sturdy narrative backbone and unrelenting forward momentum, the story explores familiar themes - alienation, humanity's relationship to nature, coming of age, and loss of innocence - but does so in a way that seems fresh and vibrant. Strong physical details adjoin keen psychological insights, and Keevil handily builds scenes that reverberate with insight and potency. Keevil has accomplished something rare: a story about rough masculinity that brims with emotion and pathos.' --The Journey Prize judges 'Keevil's writing has been compared to Raymond Carver's and I can understand the comparison, although the voice is most definitely his own. As with Carver, Keevil's stories are like ink on wet blotting paper - there's a dense dark core of story arc, spare but telling detail and dialogue, yet around that dense mass is an aureola of implied back narrative and a sense of a continuum past the final full stop.' --CCQ Magazine