A debut Chicago novel luxuriates in westerns, cowboys and the thrill of divorce

Rowan Beaird’s “The Divorcées” is powered by two women who bond, “Thelma-and-Louise” style, on a Nevada divorce ranch.

Rowan Beaird’s new novel is ‘The Divorcées’
Rowan Beaird's debut novel 'The Divorcées' follows an unhappily married Lake Forest woman who flees to a divorce ranch in Nevada in the 1950s. Flatiron / Manuel Martinez/WBEZ
Rowan Beaird’s new novel is ‘The Divorcées’
Rowan Beaird's debut novel 'The Divorcées' follows an unhappily married Lake Forest woman who flees to a divorce ranch in Nevada in the 1950s. Flatiron / Manuel Martinez/WBEZ

A debut Chicago novel luxuriates in westerns, cowboys and the thrill of divorce

Rowan Beaird’s “The Divorcées” is powered by two women who bond, “Thelma-and-Louise” style, on a Nevada divorce ranch.

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Rowan Beaird first started thinking about divorce while on her bachelorette trip in Las Vegas. The Chicago writer was taking a spin through the famed Neon Museum Las Vegas when a tour guide shared a piece of Nevada history Beaird couldn’t shake: that “everyone comes to Las Vegas to get married and goes to Reno to get divorced,’” Beaird recalls. “I had never heard that in my life.”

So, Beaird pulled up the notes application on her phone and jotted down a thought. It read: divorce ranch? Gold for a young writer.

It turns out that, for a couple decades, Nevada had the most lenient divorce laws in the country, which made it a popular destination for American women stuck in unhappy unions.

“It just felt like this story that had been lost with time,” says Beaird, herself a child of divorced parents. “It felt like a really rich setting for a novel.”

Six years later, the 37-year-old’s debut novel The Divorcées brings that world to page. The slow burn story follows Lois Gorsky Saunders, an unhappily married Lake Forest woman who flees to one such mid-century ranch — the fictional Golden Yarrow — for six weeks before filing for divorce. As a novel, The Divorcées luxuriates in the sprawling western landscape of cowboys, casinos and a small cast of wealthy women who, like Lois, find themselves caught in the precarious liminal space between marriage and divorce.

Rowan Beaird
Beaird’s debut novel showcases an interplay of elegance and fury. Manuel Martinez/WBEZ

In Beaird’s confident hands, a story that appears relatively slow at first quickly reveals tumult beneath the surface. Released on March 15, The Divorcées has received a number of enthusiastic reviews including one in The Washington Post, which notes that Beaird depicts the era with “the mastery of a film director.” Beaird is also in the final stretch of a 12-stop book tour, a rare ballyhoo for a first-time novelist.

While Lois serves as the protagonist — “it was really important to me to write someone who saw their chief role as being an observer,” Beaird says — much of the book’s plot centers around her friendship with the elegant, mysterious Greer Lang. Together, the two form a Thelma and Louise-inspired bond that propels them toward trouble. “I really wanted the book to feel almost like a coming-of-age novel,” Beaird says. “Lois is a character who feels like an outsider and is still very much finding her place in the world.”

The feeling of alienation is familiar to Beaird. Growing up in the North Shore suburb of Northfield, Beaird felt slightly out of step with her surroundings.

“I always felt like I never quite belonged,” Beaird recalls. “I listened to a lot of Elliott Smith, wore a lot of eyeliner and read Sylvia Plath. I neatly checked all the predictable boxes for teenage rebels.”

In high school, Beaird thought she might be a painter. (“I’ve explored all the totally improbable career paths,” she laughs.) But when an art teacher noticed that many of Beaird’s canvases resembled poetry more than visual art, that teacher gently nudged her toward prose. At Kenyon College, Beaird studied creative writing and, like many young writers, spent her first few years imitating authors she admired.

By the time she graduated, however, Beaird had shed her homages to Gabriel García Márquez and Jack Kerouac. Her own voice was patient and cinematic. In the following years, Beaird won the Ploughshares emerging writer award and a nomination for the Pushcart Prize.

After college, Beaird spent a year teaching in Japan and later returned to Chicago where she works a day job in the communications department at the School of the Art Institute. Beaird never gave up writing and after her first idea for a novel fizzled, she returned to the note on her phone.

“The fact that the idea kept churning through my head told me I needed to see what was there,” Beaird says. “I started to research and sketch out the story.”

In 2020, Beaird’s meditative prose caught the attention of author Rebecca Makkai. Beaird had submitted an early chapter of The Divorcées as her application to participate in a yearlong novel workshop at StoryStudio led by Makkai and the The Great Believers author was immediately drawn in.

“Her writing is so visual,” says Makkai, herself a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. “It’s so rich and fulfilling in all those censorial ways. Her writing just instantly makes you feel like you’re in the room.”

That research included combing through the University of Nevada’s Reno Divorce History project, an archive of interviews with women who once lived on the now-shuttered ranches. Beaird also picked up the memoir, The Divorce Seekers, a collection of photos and reminiscences from a wrangler living on once notorious Flying M.E. ranch.

“It’s a lurid account of all the affairs he had,” Beaird laughs, “but it’s also an insanely detailed account of what day-to-day life was like on the ranches.”

Reno, Nevada in 1953
To write authentically about divorce ranches, Beaird combed through the University of Nevada’s Reno Divorce History project, an archive of interviews with women who once lived on the now-shuttered ranches. Associated Press

While writing, Beaird also immersed herself in 1950s culture to get a sense of the setting. Films, she says, offered a lens onto the limited lives available to single women at the time. Paintings, by contrast, were a direct line to a female psyche. “The art of female abstract expressionists was really inspiring,” says Beaird, who points to Helen Frankenthaler and Elaine de Kooning as examples. “These women who were totally left out of that history, but were painting beautiful, furious canvases.”

That interplay of elegance and fury permeates the pages of The Divorcées. (Beaird wrote the novel to her own handcrafted playlist that toggled between 1950s sunshine pop and Sleater-Kinney rage rock.) And while the novel is a piece of historical fiction, Beaird believes that dynamic remains very much alive today. “As women, we are just not really taught how to express anger,” Beaird reflects. “The 1950s can sometimes feel like the distant past, but I realized that the divorcées’ fears and desires are the same as women have today.”

Female anger and frustration, Beaird adds, is thoroughly a modern story.

If you go: Beaird will discuss The Divorcées on April 10 at Lake Forest Book Store at 6 p.m. RSVP for the event at 847-234-4420.

Elly Fishman is a freelance writer and the author of “Refugee High: Coming of Age in America.”