In the landlocked center of the American West thrives a culture strongly rooted in the practices and doctrines of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the religion embraced by the early white settlers in the Utah Territory. These settlers were often called Mormons. This region is now known to many as the Mormon Corridor.
Over the last half-century, the two-lane highway that once connected much of the Mormon Corridor was replaced by the much larger Interstate Fifteen. This stretch of highway is now one of the busiest in the United States.
In his compilation of short stories, Dead On The Corridor, James Elliott’s characters live on the cultural fringes. Their faith, their lack of faith, their sins, their loves, and their life circumstances converge in unexpected ways. The result is freedom, hope, life, death, and murder.
Original publication, 2017Om författaren
James Elliott was born and raised in the Cultural Corridor of the Intermountain West, in the United States. He lives in a very small town in the middle of Utah, with his family.