Tennessee Books
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Genius!Review Date: 2006-01-13
The Usual Obligatory Hysteria From Tennessee Williams!!!Review Date: 2005-10-30
I love this playReview Date: 2005-07-13
Guilt, Frustration, and GreedReview Date: 2008-07-07
Brick Pollitt is the favored son. Failing to recover from the death of his best friend and fight the demons that come with booze, he has no desire to gain the good graces of his dying father and inherit his wealth. His brother Gooper and his wife Mae, that "monster of fertility", are engaged in a competition for the father's favor. But even nearing a sixth child, they can not measure up to Brick. The climax comes as Big Daddy and Brick attempt to reach the resolution that Brick has no desire to attain. Accusations of homosexuality and an inability to let go of his days as an athlete are among the reasons that Big Daddy suggests for Brick's inability to settle down and expand his family. Yet the resolution is not Brick's choice.
The explosion at the end is hardly as stinging as the process of getting to the conclusion. The ultimate question is whether the cat (Margaret) will choose to stay on the hot tin roof or seek refuge. The fast paced drama moves at an unflinching pace that will make readers anticipate the direction of each page. It may be difficult for some readers to disengage from this drama.
"Skipper Is Dead But I'm Alive! Maggie The Cat Is Alive!"Review Date: 2005-08-10
Maggie gets angry, but mostly we value her for her tenderness. Even when she knows her husband has lost his heart over a long-gone teammate, and that he's probably gay, she never gives up the ship. She knows that without her in his corner 100 per cent, he'll give up, drown in his own sorrows. He needs her to kick his ass and bring him back to the land of the awake. She wasn't going to be an enabler, she would always discourage him from drinking from the time he got up in the morning till he passed out at night, his crutches tangled up in his boxer shorts. For Brick, drinking is a way out of his tortured memories of Skipper, the boy he loved in high school and college. Taking a drink is "like a switch, clickin' off in my head. Turns the hot light off and the cool one on and all of a sudden, there's peace." Secretly the family has a plan to ship his butt off to Rainbow Hill, sort of a Betty Ford Clinic without the mercy.
We love Maggie trying to semaphor the truth into his thick skull by screaming, "Skipper is dead but I'm alive! Maggie the Cat is alive!"

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Fabulous Read!!!Review Date: 2008-08-28
Fast, Funny, and FascinatingReview Date: 2007-06-15
A most enjoyable readReview Date: 2007-01-16
Wonderful, and yet so disappointingReview Date: 2007-05-12
I hate it when it seems as if an author just got tired of writing a book and wraps everything up in just a few pages. This book is 244 pages long. I would have gladly read another 100-200 pages just to have walked the path with these characters as they fulfilled their destiny. Instead, I am meandering through the town watching everyone start to find their place in life when whoosh, Paula Wall writes in an event and seven pages (some of those only half pages) later the books is over. Everything is wrapped up nice and neat, but I didn't get to take the journey with the characters. So dissatisfying, so many lost laughs and tears. Sigh.
I'm glad I read it. I just wish I had stopped seven pages before the end.
The Rock Orchard: A NovelReview Date: 2007-02-18
We liked the way Charlotte gave advice to Mila and how it turned Mila's life around for the better. As Charlotte said, "we are what we are, until we decide to be different."

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Blood Ties in the BackwoodsReview Date: 2008-08-03
The story revolves around a teen-aged boy who is finding his way in the world amongst his father who is seldom present, his Uncle Warren who has moved away, his spell-casting Uncle Brady, and his grandfather, bluesman E.F. Bloodworth, who has returned to the small Tennessee community to make amends. There isn't a strong plot driving "Provinces of Night" so much as a group of great characters that pursue their own interests to comical effect.
Along the way there are plenty of jugs of moonshine to drink, women to be pursued, and blood ties to be tested. "Provinces of Night" is more raucous like Daniel Woodrell's "Give Us a Kiss," than nostalgic like John Grisham's "A Painted House." It would be difficult for me to decide which of these three 5-star novels I enjoyed more. I can say that I believe Gay to be the best of the three writers at turning a unique phrase.
Great prose with a universal themeReview Date: 2008-07-01
lyrical writingReview Date: 2008-06-26
(from my amazon.co.uk review: Gay seems to be getting some attention there)
I've lived in Tennessee for almost 30 years, in the urban setting
of Knoxville. I'm a caver, and the hunting for new caves takes
me to small towns and deeply rural areas in rugged terrain, where
one can be 40 miles from the nearest supermarket. You learn that
there are places to be avoided, where strangers are not welcome.
(You can also find such places in London, Glasgow, etc., as well
as in parts of the English countryside.) The law can be far away
and not impartial in some locations. Provinces of Night deals
with small-town Tennessee rather than the deeply rural and remote
parts. The central figure, Fleming Bloodworth, is not violence-
prone, but violence is often not far away. There is humor and
tenderness, as well as violence and death, but that's often how
life can be. Tennessee is not a slaughterhouse, but it's not
unusual to see "Three Dead in Cocke County Bar Fight" on the
evening news.
William Gay started writing at age 52. He seems to have been
strongly influenced by the novels of Cormac McCarthy, especially
those set in Tennessee (Suttree, The Orchard Keeper, Child of
God--all set in Knoxville and the surrounding counties). The
title comes from McCarthy's dark and brooding novel Child of God.
Gay's first novel, The Long Home, has a flavor similar to Child
of God, but Provinces of Night is closer to Suttree and The
Orchard Keeper. Gay's writing skills are on a par with McCarthy:
after reading Provinces of Night and The Long Home, I reread
McCarthy's novels, and took a long pause when I encountered the
phrase "provinces of night" in Child of God. I wondered in
McCarthy was writing under a pseudonym.
There's a great power and lyrical quality in Gay's writing. When
I got halfway through Provinces of Night I began to dread turning
the pages, since every page read brought me closer to the end.
So I ordered The Long Home from Amazon, taking comfort in the
knowledge that hundreds of more pages would be waiting for me.
Gay's third work, I Hate To See That Evening Sun Go Down, a
collection of short stories, has just been published, and it
contains some of the finest short stories I've ever read.
Gay is a great new addition to our current Southern writers.
He's the darker side to the rural South: for the lighter side
read T.R. Pearson's whimsical novel A Short History of a Small
Place.
Poetic and BeautifulReview Date: 2007-11-10
Superb dialogueReview Date: 2004-12-08

Problems of Eighth-GradersReview Date: 2007-06-29
Other stories deal with more difficult topics: domestic violence, death, homosexuality, and date rape. For this one night, though, maybe these students can put aside their problems and enjoy the magic of the dance.
I liked the way these stories came together. I especially liked when different stories mentioned the same characters. As with all short stories, though, I was left wanting more detail.
short but sweet!Review Date: 2006-01-24
kissing tennesseeReview Date: 2006-01-23
Lyrical!Review Date: 2002-11-26
Kissing Tennessee and Other Stories from the Stardust DanceReview Date: 2005-10-08

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Very GoodReview Date: 2007-03-16
The information the reader learns about the Korean War is also fantastic. For American readers some of this information will come as a shock as this war is not as well known about as the two wars that bracketed it (WW2 & Vietnam).
I wasn't going to say this, but after reading many of these reviews, I feel I must say something. I think a lot of the negative response to the relationship in this book has to do with it's specific components. Sadly it seems, too many people still can't picture an Asian male in a relationship with a Caucasian female. More's the pity.
Strangely Elusive...Review Date: 2005-12-19
Mostly engagingReview Date: 2008-06-09
Some first-novel flaws -- but worth a readReview Date: 2004-07-08
Finally, I found the writing somewhat tedious at times (even while it was intelligent and lucid throughout). The somewhat journalistic passages about the Korean War didn't bother me as much as it seems to have bothered other reviewers (in fact, I found them helpful and informative); rather, it was the long passages of exposition, wherein a character would ponder his/her thoughts and feelings in depth, that I found unnecessarily slow and overwritten.
Despite all this (overly long, I'll admit) criticism, I believe that many readers will find this book a worthwhile read. Choi writes with intelligence and a strong sense of character; I have no doubt that more fine books will come from her.
good if uneven writingReview Date: 2003-03-29
The best character in this book was Edison. The relationship between him and Katherine is very well depicted. In fact, come to think of it, it was almost like reading two books in one.
If Choi sticks to the world she knows mor intimately, which seems to me western rather than eastern, American rather than Korean, she would produce something wonderful with her talent.

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A REAL PAGE TURNERReview Date: 2008-07-18
Engaging view of the pastReview Date: 2008-07-15
Quito is QualityReview Date: 2008-07-15
Loved it!Review Date: 2008-07-11
The Legend of Quitto RoadReview Date: 2008-06-26
I have driven down Quito road many times. All in all, I highly recommend this book.

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A Classic ShowdownReview Date: 2008-03-11
Into this perfect environment appeared one Dallas Hardin, a man who would let nothing stand between him and what he wanted, even if what he wanted was another man's wife, home and business. He simply took those things and dared you to do anything about it. Those tempted to try to do something about Hardin knew that they would likely end up dead and that life would just go on without them. As a result, the evil that Hardin was continued to grow stronger by the year.
That is not to say that everyone closed their eyes when it came to Dallas Hardin and what he represented. Some, like old William Tell Oliver who lived nearby Hardin's dancehall, could hardly help observing some of the things that went on there when no one else was around, including vicious beatings and even murder. One or two, like young Nathan Winer whose father had his own run-in with Hardin, were willing to stand up to Hardin - up to a point.
A classic battle of good vs. evil was bound to happen when someone brave enough to take on Dallas Hardin finally had enough of his ways. Little did Nathan Winer think that by falling in love with Hardin's "stepdaughter" that he would be the one to trigger that confrontation or that he and old man Oliver would find themselves locked with Hardin in a fight to the finish.
William Gay's writing is like Cormac McCarthy's in that it deals with people who are trying to scratch a living from the land, dirt farmers, small ranchers, day laborers, bootleggers, and the women who have to depend on them. Gay's world is often bloody and violent, and like McCarthy, he goes where his story leads and does not soften or hide that violence by quickly moving on to the next scene. That willingness to face violence head-on is part of the makeup of Gay's characters and his readers should be prepared to do the same because this is one of the roughest coming-of-age novels that they are likely ever to encounter.
Since 1999 Gay has followed The Long House with two more novels and a collection of short stories. His work is firmly in the Southern Gothic mode, almost always set in the South of the 1940s and 1950s, and has drawn favorable comparisons to the work of McCarthy, Faulkner, O'Connor and Caldwell. Fans of that illustrious group might want to check out the work of William Gay to see what they have been missing.
THERE'S SHOT WHISKEY, AND THERE'S SIPPIN' WHISKEY...Review Date: 2002-11-02
His characters are vivid and believable, and he brings them to life slowly, rather than burying the reader in a swamp of description. We get to know them as we would a person in our day-to-day lives, through their actions, conversations, and what thoughts they might care to share with us - it's an experience that makes reading this novel all the more precious and amazing. The descriptions that occur within these pages are subtle as well - his vocabulary is astonishing, and when he can't find a suitable word already in general usage, he constructs one (always to good advantage). Time after time, reading this incredible novel, I found myself going over a passage again and again, to make sure that I wasn't imagining the creative powers at work here.
Gay's literary gifts are amazing - but he never uses them in such a way as to overpower his characters. The novel is set in rural Tennessee in the 1940s - and that time and place is firmly established within the first few pages. I felt transported as I read it. Gay lives in Hohenwald, Tennessee - and his knowledge of the area and the people, and his obvious empathy toward them, give his fiction a sense of reality that is both gentle and ferocious.
Dirt farmers, laborers, bootleggers, lawmen (both honest and crooked), women and men old before their time, young people aching for something - anything - more than what they see around them, what they see as their future if they remain where they are. The story here is basically an old one - that of an evil presence in the midst of normalcy, ignored or tolerated by most of the citizens in the area, that slowly establishes itself as a power not to be questioned without dire retribution. What's the old saying? `Absolute power corrupts absolutely' - the mighty tend to fall mighty hard, and they seldom see it coming. The evil character in this novel - one Dallas Hardin, bootlegger, honkytonk operator, would-be pimp and many more unsavory occupations - is one of the most memorable baddies I've come across in some time. The evil within him is made palpable - you can feel it in the air, it will make your skin crawl - by William Gay's skill.
I've already started reading his second novel, and I've got my eye on his collected short stories as well. Gay's work was recommended to me by another author - and it's a recommendation for which I'll be grateful for a long, long time. This is high magick.
Standing OvationReview Date: 2007-08-08
Superb tapestry of Tennessee rural life half a century agoReview Date: 2002-11-25
PowerfulReview Date: 2001-05-06

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Insistent.Review Date: 2008-10-12
Two lives and anotherReview Date: 2007-09-11
Mary
Just a wonderful, wonderful storyReview Date: 2007-01-18
Don't read the back of the bookReview Date: 2007-03-10
A LIGHT tear-jerkerReview Date: 2007-05-13
The novel is, in short, a tear-jerker, which may be your cup of tea. I'm sure Oprah would love it! But it's not good writing. It's not poetic. It's not literature. It just isn't!

You can go home againReview Date: 2008-10-15
Jourdan's warm memoir, "Heart in the Right Place," chronicles her experiences at the front desk of her father's office and the adjustments she makes to life in a small town.
The book has gathered a basket full of honors, including "A Best Book Club of 2007-2008" by Book Sense, "A Best Book of 2007-2008" by The Literary Guild and "A 2008 Top Summer Read" by The New York Public Library.
Jourdan's opening chapter spotlights her quick wit and sharp sense of humor as she recounts her first day on the job.
As I unlocked the front door of the office I could hear the phone ringing. I hurried inside and stretched across the reception desk to answer it.
"Dr. Jourdan's office," I said, out of breath."
"Do y'all wash out feet?" a woman shouted.
... "Excuse me?"
"Wash out feet! Do y'all wash out feet?"
"I ... I don't know." I sent up a silent prayer that we did not.
"Well she needs her foot washed out! How much do y'all charge for that?"
Jourdan's easy writing style moves the story right along. She makes you care about her mother's rehabilitation, her father's heavy workload and the health and well-being of the patients that cross her path.
Her stories prove that people in small towns all across this country care about one another enough to make significant sacrifices. And that's a good thing.
Enjoy!
A Bit Overdone But Still EntertainingReview Date: 2008-09-27
wholly lackingReview Date: 2008-08-29
A Good Read!Review Date: 2008-06-02
HeartwarmingReview Date: 2008-10-08

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A Shred of TruthReview Date: 2007-12-19
I hesitate to ever visit Nashville for fear of it not living up to the glamor of the ever noir perspective of Aramis--or worse; to discover no espresso shop on Elliston Place.
Many authors toil in attempts to suspend belief, but somehow Eric Wilson has managed to do the opposite and create belief due to immensely compelling character development with interaction that is very true-to-life. Many suspense tales pass their peak with weak or forced plot devices which weakly flutter toward the climax, and I confess I was fearful that may have been the case--that Eric Wilson had out-done himself--and anticipated a dismal and disappointing ending. But I was wrong. Few authors are able to dupe me, but I would be remiss to say I saw the ending coming. The plot is truly a masterful crescendo of twists and turns.
Very seldom am I captivated by the simple if gripping telling of a mundane story as I am an action movie buff, and honestly I am often annoyed by first-person mystery yarns, but the raw and gritty vitality of this tale extends beyond the reader's imagination into the daily perception of truth itself. Or at least a shred of it.
Struggle of good and evilReview Date: 2007-09-19
We first met Aramis Black in The Best of Evil, where Wilson turned a coffee shop owner into a rich and engaging character that readers can't help but love. In A Shred of Truth, Wilson takes us deeper into Aramis' life, and what a ride it is. All of the great elements of storytelling are here: engaging dialogue, perfectly executed plot development, fascinating characters, not to mention a classic "whodunit" element that will keep reader's guessing until the end. Wilson also does a superb job of bringing the city of Nashville to life, making it familiar to readers who have never been there. This is Eric Wilson at the top of his game.
Eric Wilson continues to churn out quality fiction that effectively explores man's struggle between light and the darkness that threatens to consume. From his Five Senses novels to the Aramis Black series, Wilson continues to excel at his craft. Recently he has signed on with Thomas Nelson, who will be publishing his highly anticipated Jerusalem's Undead Trilogy due out in fall 2008. Wilson's next project is the novelization of the film, Facing the Giants, which will be available in September.
Armchair Interviews says: Dust off your bookshelf and make some room for one of the best up and coming writing talents out there.
Eric continues to keep us hooked!Review Date: 2007-10-03
This novel really grabbed me from the opening because of the violent attack on one of my favorite characters from the first book. I don't want to give anything away, but let me say this sets the tone for the story. No one in Black's life is safe, and the enemy he faces this time has no mercy. The suspense is ratcheted up several notches and you can really see how Wilson has grown as a writer with each novel.
Easily placing as one of my top ten favorite thrillers of the year, "A Shred of Truth" is a great story that will keep you pulled in until the last page.
BELIEVABLE!Review Date: 2007-09-04
His characters become old friends and one wants to read more about them; they are also fallible but hold on to beliefs through the trials they must walk to get to the truth.
Even his sociopath is believely evil. And, Eric Wilson always has clues added to his stories to spice it up even more!
I work in a library and am always on the look out for 'new good' talent and Wilson is a consistant author. An author of whom you want his next book, next series, next and next and next. Keep writing Eric!
IntoxicatingReview Date: 2007-08-21
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