Category: Southern Fiction (Page 16 of 24)

Kevin Wilson Love

Mr. and Mrs. Fang called it art. Their children called it mischief. ‘You make a mess and then you walk away from it,’ their daughter, Annie, told them. ‘It’s a lot more complicated than that, honey,’ Mrs. Fang said as she handed detailed breakdowns of the event to each member of the family. ‘But there’s a simplicity in what we do as well,’ Mr. Fang said. ‘Yes, there is that, too,’ his wife replied. Annie and her younger brother, Buster, said nothing.”

And so begins the story of the Family Fang. Mr. and Mrs. Fang are award-winning performance artists, meaning they stage “events,” by which I mean upsetting, but humorous, public displays, and their best props are their two children Child A and Child B, otherwise known as Annie and Buster. After this particular “event” in which the children help their parents stage a candy store robbery, you find Annie and Buster, waiting for their parents to extricate themselves from trouble, tossing pennies into the mall’s fountain “each making wishes that they hoped were simple enough to come true.”

The Family Fang is a novel about, well, a family, and while I don’t think Wilson generalizes with his characters (the Fangs are a very unique family and I don’t think many of us can compare our childhoods to those of the Fang children), Annie and Buster do make us realize the extent to which our parents can affect us—even as adults. Sure, the Fang events are ridiculous and it might be good fun to watch one happen in a shopping mall near you, but at what cost to the young Fangs? I don’t want to give away too much, but let’s just say that this black comedy does not have a fluffy ending tied up with a bow. Wilson’s humorous tale does have real substance and questions the consequences of raising children in a household where art is placed above all else. I particularly like the way Janet Maslin, in the NY Times review, phrased it: “All children eventually question lies their parents have told them, but the Fangs take that chicanery to a whole new level.”

Wilson has been a Lemuria favorite since the 2009 release of his short story collection Tunneling to the Center of the Earth (a collection that I personally feel like I could re-read an infinite number of times without tiring of it), and we cannot wait to welcome him back to the store on August 18 at 5pm.

I also have to add that the cover art for The Family Fang was done by one of my favorite illustrators Julie Morstad (who I wrote about a few months ago), which only adds to my love of this book.

See Emily’s blog on her love for The Family Fang and Kevin Wilson here.  -Kaycie

 

I ♥ The Family Fang

I first fell in love with Kevin Wilson’s writing in 2009. This quirky Harper paperback original caught my eye with its beautiful cover and then captivated me with its stories of lost and searching characters. A good short story collection is as congruous as a great album–each song is a gem in and of itself, but the real beauty of the collection is the way each song complements its counterparts and works together to create a perfect sum total of the parts, not just a good song. Tunneling to the Center of the Earth does just that: each story is good in and of itself, but the entire body of work jives. There is not a single story that needs skipping.

When Kevin was here for the release of his first book, I garnered a coveted Lemurian attendance to his reading. He surprised us all by reading a piece he had just written, and while I can’t remember what it was actually about, I do remember the feeling of sitting out on the Dot Com deck and realizing how fortunate I was because even then I just knew: Kevin was going places. His writing style is unique and refreshing and familiar all at the same time. In 2010, Tunneling to the Center of the Earth won the Shirley Jackson award and an Alex award, and every time I read of Kevin’s accolades I wanted to clap for him and say, ‘I knew it!’

During that same visit, Kevin also told us that he had been signed to write a short story collection and a novel. So when I first heard last fall that he had finished his novel, I was ecstatic. It was finally here. I snagged an advanced copy from Joe’s desk and then promptly came down with the flu. Now, the flu part of that week, as you can guess, was horrible. But Kevin’s novel, The Family Fang, made my week. I couldn’t read it fast enough and I couldn’t bear to finish it; it was just that good.

The Fangs are quite different than your average family. Think Wes Anderson’s The Royal Tenenbaums or the dysfunctional family in Margot at the Wedding. The parents, Caleb and Camille Fang, are performance artist who believe that chaos is the highest form of art. They wish to disrupt the world, to pull it from its malaise and elevate it with their art. They use their own children as props in their public art events, which often occur in shopping malls full of the Fang’s unsuspecting audience.

Child A and Child B, also known by their true names Annie and Buster, participate in their parents’ mad schemes for a time. But as all children do, Annie and Buster grow up and begin to realize the absurdity of their parents’ art, and it’s that same realization that makes reading this novel both entertaining and sobering. Without their child props, Caleb and Camille try to continue their art performances, but as shopping malls become outdated and social media devices more prevalent, their ‘events’ fall flat. They begin searching for the ultimate ‘Fang event,’ something that will solidify their place in history. I can’t tell you much more without giving away a large portion of the plot, but I must say that the ending was just as surprising and well written as I had hoped it would be.

I cannot wait to hear Kevin’s thoughts on his newest novel and to hear him read on Thursday, August 18th at 5:00. Much like Kevin’s last visit did, his signing this Thursday is sure to add an invaluable element to my reading and remembrance of The Family Fang. I honestly believe that you will regret not coming to Lemuria for Kevin’s visit. His contribution to Southern literature is brilliant.

See Kaycie’s blog on her love for The Family Fang and Kevin Wilson here.

A Good Hard Look by Ann Napolitano

In the spring I was handed the ARC (advance reader’s copy) of a novel, yes, I did say “novel” starring Flannery O’Connor as a main character. Now, reread that previous sentence!  For those English majors of us who have read and studied Flannery O’Connor’s shocking and provoking  short stories for decades, I was fascinated.  And, in my case, as an adjunct English instructor at area colleges, I  have had the pleasure of introducing this controversial noteworthy Southern writer to inquiring students.  So,  I gave the book a cursory look.  I was dubious at best; yet, I was intrigued enough to begin reading the first novel ever involving the character Flannery.

For those readers who have not yet had the pleasure of reading any of Flannery O’Connor’s short stories, you must read a couple before starting this novel. We have several  good collections here at Lemuria. I would recommend your reading A Good Man is Hard to Find and Good Country People  to start. Once you have read these, you are now ready to begin this newly released novel, A Good Hard Look, this title, cleverly being a “take-off” on the title of the first short story title above. (Of course, if you just want to jump right in on this novel, and then read O’Connor’s short stories afterwards, then that will work as well!)

The point that I’m making here is that Ann Napolitano refers to Flannery O’Connor’s short stories throughout this novel, and, for that matter, the plot and the characters themselves often reflect O’Connor’s plots and characters in a very clever way. Suffice it to say: the characters are flawed by life, by turmoil, by desire, by boredom, etc., etc., and their actions are often reactions to their current life status; therefore, all sorts of “escape” occur as an  answer for them to run, run, run!

As A Good Hard Look begins, the reader is propelled into a Southern setting filled with glorious tailfeathers of numerous peacocks screaming their heads off on the eve of  the wedding of two of the main characters, the to-be bride having grown up with, but not been on good terms with Flannery. The irony does not escape the reader for long as he or she learns that these squawking preening peacocks belong to Flannery and her mother who live down a country road from town.

The much awaited beautiful perfect Southern wedding is now blemished before it even begins because “Cookie”, the bride to be, falls from her bed and hits her face causing a black eye to emerge, due to the very startling terrific screams of the peacocks—-essentially the fault of Flannery not being able to control her birds. So, the animosity that Cookie has always felt toward Flannery is fueled again.

Jump forward a few chapters and the reader learns that Cookie’s new husband from New York, essentially a “trust-fund” boy who really doesn’t have to work, becomes fascinated with the town’s favorite eccentric author and not only begins to read her short stories, but also develops a close relationship with Flannery even going so far as to drive out to her house fairly often, but “in secret,” not daring to let on to  his new wife who certainly would not like the idea at all.

Various sub-plots, such as a early middle-aged woman having an affair with a teenaged boy, plus various other controversial relationships, wind themselves throughout the plot. Tragedy strikes the novel, not once, but twice, both in a big horrific way. One does involve Flannery, her peacocks, her country house, and Cookie’s husband and his and Cookie’s new little baby girl.

The other involves a horrifying murder. “Shocking” should not be the operative word here, if one is in-tune with Flannery O’Connor’s short stories. As I mentioned earlier in this blog, the author Ann Napolitano, infuses this novel with hints of O’Connor’s stories. In other words, I would say that Napolitano has crafted a novel here which is “true” to the fine Southern author herself and her subject matter.

One last thing which struck me as noteworthy about this novel, and again, being familiar with O’Connor’s stories, enables me to make this observation: grace and redemption, maybe not in their full forms, but certainly in small doses, do ring true in A Good Hard Look, for some of the characters do find a way through their chaos to befriend and help their human, as well as animal friends.

Finally, I would also surmise that Napolitano also handles Flannery, the person, with respect, especially her debilitating bouts with the disease of lupus, which finally took her life in1962. This is a novel which Mississippians and other Southerners should read, for it does take “a good hard look” at one of our very most remarkable and talented Southern writers.

A Good Hard Look is our July First Editions Club Pick.

-Nan

A Good Hard Look by Ann Napolitano

A few months ago I was handed an advanced reader copy of A Good Hard Look by Ann Napolitano. I had no idea what to expect outside of the fact that Flannery O’Connor was a character in the novel. I couldn’t put it down once I started reading it! And Nan couldn’t put it down either. Here’s some of what she had to say about A Good Hard Look:

. . . One last thing which struck me as noteworthy about this novel, and again, being familiar with O’Connor’s stories, enables me to make this observation: grace and redemption, maybe not in their full forms, but certainly in small doses, do ring true in A Good Hard Look, for some of the characters do find a way through their chaos to befriend and help their human, as well as animal friends. Finally, I would also surmise that Napolitano also handles Flannery, the person, with respect, especially her debilitating bouts with the disease of lupus, which finally took her life in 1962. This is a novel which Mississippians and other Southerners should read, for it does take “a good hard look” at one of our very most remarkable and talented Southern writers.

We are proud to have selected A Good Hard Look as our July First Editions Club pick.

Tomorrow evening Ann Napolitano will be joining us at Lemuria for a signing (5.00) and reading (5.30).

I’ll give you a taste of the novel and Ann Napolitano’s own story by sharing part of an interview between Sarah Hutson of Penguin and Ann Napolitano. They were kind enough to share it with us in full, but do join us tomorrow!

Did you know from the beginning that Flannery O’Connor would feature so prominently in your novel?

When I started A Good Hard Look, I had no idea Flannery O’Connor would come anywhere near the novel. If you’d told me she would be one of the characters, I would have said you were crazy. I had no aspiration to write historical fiction and I hadn’t read any of Flannery’s work in about a decade.

Initially, the book was about a character called Melvin Whiteson, who lived in New York in the present day. I had the idea of this very wealthy man who’d been given every opportunity, but didn’t know what to do with those opportunities. I was interested in the question of how people choose to live their lives.

The novel wasn’t working though; I think Melvin was more of an idea than a character. It was about a year into the book that Flannery O’Connor showed up out of the blue—creatively speaking—though in hindsight, I can see that she embodies for me this idea of a “life well-lived”. Her appearance changed everything, of course. The time period, the setting, the heartbeat of the novel. I think she also provided the contrast that Melvin required to come to life as a character, and really, to shape the rest of the narrative.

Have you always been a fan?

I read her stories in college, like every other dutiful English major. The stories awed me for their precision, their fierceness of thought, their grim beauty. I didn’t love the stories, though—they seemed too harsh; they felt so alien to me, as a northern, somewhat gentle, novice writer.

My true fandom began my senior year, when I was assigned the collection of her letters, The Habit of Being. Flannery’s letters are wonderful—she’s irreverent and sarcastic and kind and generous. She’s accessible, and even sweet in a way you’d never guess from her fiction. I fell in love with her then.

I also connected with the content of the letters, which spoke directly to the circumstances of my life. Flannery chronicled her battle with lupus; when I read the letters, I was also sick. I’d been diagnosed with the Epstein-Barr virus, an auto-immune disease, six months earlier. As it turned out, I would be ill for the next three years, and the symptoms had already dissembled my highly active, twenty-year-old life.

I had what Oprah would probably call an “A-ha moment” while reading those letters. Flannery wrote about coming to terms with her changed situation, and deciding to focus her limited energy where it would matter most—in her writing. I consciously sized up my own life in a similar manner. I had always loved writing, but I lacked the confidence to declare myself a writer.

After I graduated, I planned to work in publishing, or something book-related. I would surround myself with other people’s words, and maybe write my own in secret, as a hobby. But my illness, and Flannery’s example, offered up a new clarity. I was able to appreciate, in a way my obnoxiously healthy twenty-year-old peers couldn’t, the real brevity of life. I could see how important it was to make each moment meaningful, and to make my life matter somehow. Because of Flannery, I decided to become a writer.

How did you go about creating Flannery, the character?

When she showed up in the novel—which felt right, intuitively—I was terrified. I did a lot of research, of course. I started by reading everything I could get my hands on. I re-read Flannery’s stories, her essays and two novels. I read the one existing biography on her, and several critical essays about her work. I visited Andalusia (the Georgia farm where she lived with her mother) and walked all over Milledgeville.

The real answer though is that it took me years to create “my Flannery”. I was so scared to misrepresent her that I avoided going into her head for a long time. I thought that if I depicted her from a distance, I would be less likely to mess her up. Not shockingly, that was a limited path. It was only when I truly committed to her presence in the story that she came to life.

As someone who has always lived in the Northeast, did you have any hesitation writing about one of the greats of southern literature?

Yes. When I showed the first draft to one of my closest writer friends, who happens to be from Alabama, she raised an eyebrow and said, “Really? You’re going to write about the South?” She meant it as a challenge, and I took it as such.

The South has a rich, deep history, and that extends to their literary history. If you think about it, many of our greatest American writers are Southern—William Faulkner, Harper Lee, Mark Twain, Alice Walker, Eudora Welty, Katherine Anne Porter, Carson McCullers, to name a few—and the South takes a rightful pride in that heritage. You could even say that they’re territorial about it, and I certainly felt the risk in not only placing the book in the South, but in taking on one of their literary icons. I moved forward simply because I felt compelled to do so. But the book took seven years to write, in part because I knew I would hate to be accused of disrespecting the legacy I was treading on.

How did you go about creating Flannery, the character?

When she showed up in the novel—which felt right, intuitively—I was terrified. I did a lot of research, of course. I started by reading everything I could get my hands on. I re-read Flannery’s stories, her essays and two novels. I read the one existing biography on her, and several critical essays about her work. I visited Andalusia (the Georgia farm where she lived with her mother) and walked all over Milledgeville.

The real answer though is that it took me years to create “my Flannery”. I was so scared to misrepresent her that I avoided going into her head for a long time. I thought that if I depicted her from a distance, I would be less likely to mess her up. Not shockingly, that was a limited path. It was only when I truly committed to her presence in the story that she came to life.

As someone who has always lived in the Northeast, did you have any hesitation writing about one of the greats of southern literature?

Yes. When I showed the first draft to one of my closest writer friends, who happens to be from Alabama, she raised an eyebrow and said, “Really? You’re going to write about the South?” She meant it as a challenge, and I took it as such. The South has a rich, deep history, and that extends to their literary history. If you think about it, many of our greatest American writers are Southern—William Faulkner, Harper Lee, Mark Twain, Alice Walker, Eudora Welty, Katherine Anne Porter, Carson McCullers, to name a few—and the South takes a rightful pride in that heritage. You could even say that they’re territorial about it, and I certainly felt the risk in not only placing the book in the South, but in taking on one of their literary icons. I moved forward simply because I felt compelled to do so. But the book took seven years to write, in part because I knew I would hate to be accused of disrespecting the legacy I was treading on.

Your characters are so vivid—and beautifully and tragically human: Cookie, the perfect Southern wife, who is afraid to look too closely at herself or others; Lona, the seamstress, who sleepwalks through life, until she makes the fateful decision to feed her own needs and desires; Flannery, whose sharp perception and ironclad devotion to writing pushes most people away; Melvin, the fortunate son, who is content to simply be content until he suffers the greatest of losses. Do you have a favorite character—or is that akin to asking a parent which child they like best?

It’s interesting—about a month ago a wonderful website called This Recording had a piece on Flannery that included a few photos of her I had never seen (a feat, because during my research for the novel I thought I’d seen them all) and I found myself tearing up. I was surprised at how emotional I became, and I wanted to understand why my response was so strong. How had my heart gotten this wrapped up in Flannery? Was it unhealthy to feel this attached to her? What did it mean?

What I concluded was that if I were able to see a photo of Melvin or Cookie or Lona, I would likely respond the same way. Most writers never get a chance to see photographs of their characters, because they’re fictional. My characters are equally real to me, even though Flannery is the only one that’s actually real. Does this mean I’ll cry every time I see a photograph of her? I certainly hope not.

How did you go about creating Flannery, the character?

 

When she showed up in the novel—which felt right, intuitively—I was terrified. I did a lot of research, of course. I started by reading everything I could get my hands on. I re-read Flannery’s stories, her essays and two novels. I read the one existing biography on her, and several critical essays about her work. I visited Andalusia (the Georgia farm where she lived with her mother) and walked all over Milledgeville.

 

The real answer though is that it took me years to create “my Flannery”. I was so scared to misrepresent her that I avoided going into her head for a long time. I thought that if I depicted her from a distance, I would be less likely to mess her up. Not shockingly, that was a limited path. It was only when I truly committed to her presence in the story that she came to life.

 

 

As someone who has always lived in the Northeast, did you have any hesitation writing about one of the greats of southern literature?

 

Yes. When I showed the first draft to one of my closest writer friends, who happens to be from Alabama, she raised an eyebrow and said, “Really? You’re going to write about the South?” She meant it as a challenge, and I took it as such. The South has a rich, deep history, and that extends to their literary history. If you think about it, many of our greatest American writers are Southern—William Faulkner, Harper Lee, Mark Twain, Alice Walker, Eudora Welty, Katherine Anne Porter, Carson McCullers, to name a few—and the South takes a rightful pride in that heritage. You could even say that they’re territorial about it, and I certainly felt the risk in not only placing the book in the South, but in taking on one of their literary icons. I moved forward simply because I felt compelled to do so. But the book took seven years to write, in part because I knew I would hate to be accused of disrespecting the legacy I was treading on.

 

 

Your characters are so vivid—and beautifully and tragically human: Cookie, the perfect Southern wife, who is afraid to look too closely at herself or others; Lona, the seamstress, who sleepwalks through life, until she makes the fateful decision to feed her own needs and desires; Flannery, whose sharp perception and ironclad devotion to writing pushes most people away; Melvin, the fortunate son, who is content to simply be content until he suffers the greatest of losses. Do you have a favorite character—or is that akin to asking a parent which child they like best?

 

It’s interesting—about a month ago a wonderful website called This Recording had a piece on Flannery that included a few photos of her I had never seen (a feat, because during my research for the novel I thought I’d seen them all) and I found myself tearing up. I was surprised at how emotional I became, and I wanted to understand why my response was so strong. How had my heart gotten this wrapped up in Flannery? Was it unhealthy to feel this attached to her? What did it mean?

 

What I concluded was that if I were able to see a photo of Melvin or Cookie or Lona, I would likely respond the same way. Most writers never get a chance to see photographs of their characters, because they’re fictional. My characters are equally real to me, even though Flannery is the only one that’s actually real. Does this mean I’ll cry every time I see a photograph of her? I certainly hope not.

How did you go about creating Flannery, the character?

 

When she showed up in the novel—which felt right, intuitively—I was terrified. I did a lot of research, of course. I started by reading everything I could get my hands on. I re-read Flannery’s stories, her essays and two novels. I read the one existing biography on her, and several critical essays about her work. I visited Andalusia (the Georgia farm where she lived with her mother) and walked all over Milledgeville.

 

The real answer though is that it took me years to create “my Flannery”. I was so scared to misrepresent her that I avoided going into her head for a long time. I thought that if I depicted her from a distance, I would be less likely to mess her up. Not shockingly, that was a limited path. It was only when I truly committed to her presence in the story that she came to life.

 

 

As someone who has always lived in the Northeast, did you have any hesitation writing about one of the greats of southern literature?

 

Yes. When I showed the first draft to one of my closest writer friends, who happens to be from Alabama, she raised an eyebrow and said, “Really? You’re going to write about the South?” She meant it as a challenge, and I took it as such. The South has a rich, deep history, and that extends to their literary history. If you think about it, many of our greatest American writers are Southern—William Faulkner, Harper Lee, Mark Twain, Alice Walker, Eudora Welty, Katherine Anne Porter, Carson McCullers, to name a few—and the South takes a rightful pride in that heritage. You could even say that they’re territorial about it, and I certainly felt the risk in not only placing the book in the South, but in taking on one of their literary icons. I moved forward simply because I felt compelled to do so. But the book took seven years to write, in part because I knew I would hate to be accused of disrespecting the legacy I was treading on.

 

 

Your characters are so vivid—and beautifully and tragically human: Cookie, the perfect Southern wife, who is afraid to look too closely at herself or others; Lona, the seamstress, who sleepwalks through life, until she makes the fateful decision to feed her own needs and desires; Flannery, whose sharp perception and ironclad devotion to writing pushes most people away; Melvin, the fortunate son, who is content to simply be content until he suffers the greatest of losses. Do you have a favorite character—or is that akin to asking a parent which child they like best?

 

It’s interesting—about a month ago a wonderful website called This Recording had a piece on Flannery that included a few photos of her I had never seen (a feat, because during my research for the novel I thought I’d seen them all) and I found myself tearing up. I was surprised at how emotional I became, and I wanted to understand why my response was so strong. How had my heart gotten this wrapped up in Flannery? Was it unhealthy to feel this attached to her? What did it mean?

 

What I concluded was that if I were able to see a photo of Melvin or Cookie or Lona, I would likely respond the same way. Most writers never get a chance to see photographs of their characters, because they’re fictional. My characters are equally real to me, even though Flannery is the only one that’s actually real. Does this mean I’ll cry every time I see a photograph of her? I certainly hope not.

Media Mixing

Dear Listener,

For those of you that don’t know me yet, my name is Simon. Lemuria was gracious enough to give me a job about a month ago when my beloved employer Be-Bop Record Shop was forced to close its doors. I am very excited to share my insight on my favorite recent read, but a part of me is still strongly linked to music.

Sharpshooter BluesLuckily! I had an idea in which I could share both. I regularly read and I regularly listen. Naturally, I am forced to listen while I read, otherwise I wouldn’t consume nearly as much as I prefer. It wasn’t long before I realized that these two artistic entities were actually working off each other and creating a tension between the moods of the book and the music. Frequently one will overpower the other and convince me to feel things that I wouldn’t have normally felt from the tone of one alone.

Recently I finished Sharpshooter Blues (1995) by Lewis Nordan. It’s no secret that reading Nordan can be comparative to stabbing yourself in the heart with a knife made out of love. Elation and hospitality exist to build one up as to have a longer drop when the floor is ripped away from you.

Music of the SwampHaving already read Music of the Swamp (1991), I had a pretty good idea of Nordan’s ability to perform this magic trick. It was for this reason I decided to try a little experiment. I thought maybe if I listened to something that was almost too happy, the bittersweetness would be easier to deal with. I picked an album by a defunct Jackson band called Circus of the Seed. Raspy southern vocals, trumpet, and a very melodious rhythm section made for an appropriate background for the over-optimism of the lyrics. Well by golly! I’d say it worked. The mixture produced a warm ambiance that very nearly turned what would have been tears of sadness into tears of joy.

My good friend Cody Cox and I produce a monthly mix cd that attempts to spread the good word of local, regional, and nationally known music to garner awareness of the caliber of art that surrounds us. A track from the unreleased Circus of the Seed EP is the first track of the latest mix (Issue #3) that can be picked up for free at Lemuria.

by Simon

Welcome back, Adam

by Kelly Pickerill

At the end of June last year, Adam Ross came to Lemuria for an early stop on his first book’s tour. Mr. Peanut was released by Knopf on June 22, 2010, to great acclaim: master of crime Scott Turow penned a front page New York Times Book Review article, Stephen King blurbed the novel, calling it “The most riveting look at the dark side of marriage since Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,” and Lemuria, with overwhelming support from the staff, chose it to be our
July First Editions Club pick
(it’s the 6th review down, written by Zita).

A year later, Adam Ross is back with a book of short stories. In an interview with Dan Coxon on CultureMob, Ross talks about how the stories in Ladies and Gentlemen came to be:

The stories that comprise Ladies and Gentlemen were written during breaks that were thrust upon me while drafting Mr. Peanut, because there were stretches where I was simply stuck, quiet and quite anxious times when I was figuring out how to link up its disparate narratives. Meanwhile I had all these other ideas that presented themselves on what seemed like a much more manageable scale and I desperately wanted to get a taste of The End of something, so I’d honor inspiration at these times; and when my agent was ready to shop Mr. Peanut I also had thirteen or more stories under my belt which we boiled down to seven and which, we discovered, orbited similar themes as the novel.

The first story, the longest at 62 pages, is about an out of work middle aged man who, coming to realize that his desperation connects to his lifelong lack of ambition, attempts to take a neighbor’s son under his wing when he sees him choosing the same path. But just like in Mr. Peanut, that’s only the surface of the story. The connection between Ross’s stories and his novel is evident in his, well, storytelling. After all, doesn’t “telling a story” essentially mean “lying,” in order to beguile (Ross’s stories do this), instruct (yes, this too), or entertain (yes, without a doubt)?

In both books, the reader is being told a story, first and foremost, and if he ever forgets it, the outcome of Ross’s stories may shock him. As the narrator in “The Suicide Room” says, “I’m free to embellish, to treat memory as fact or shape it to suit whatever I’m working on. My primary responsibility, I suppose, is to set you dreaming. If that requires me to alter things, then I will.” But there is much truth among the lies (excuse me, stories) of Ladies and Gentlemen, and for that Lemuria will always be glad to listen to the stories of Adam Ross.

Adam Ross will be signing and reading at Lemuria Thursday, July 14th, beginning at 5 o’clock. Ladies and Gentlemen, New York: Knopf (2011), is available for pre-order here.

FEC members: If you received a signed first edition of Mr. Peanut last year and would like to add a copy of Ladies and Gentlemen to your First Editions Club shipment this month, email zita@lemuriabooks.com

Meet our ol’ buddy Ace

I couldn’t resist running this picture or Ace in our print ads the last couple of weeks. It’s rare and cool to have an author who in his former life played SEC football.

We Mississippians are always looking for the next big writer to come out of our state – you know John Grisham and Greg Iles did it so who’s next? Well, if you haven’t caught onto the fact that Ace Atkins is the real deal then now is the perfect time.

The Ranger is the first of a new series for Ace. The protagonist comes home to Mississippi from Iraq and uncovers crime and mystery in his hometown. His uncle has died under mysterious circumstances and some unruly characters have taken over the town. The Washington Post has referred to The Ranger as redneck noir and compared Ace to Greg Iles – not a bad description and not bad company.

And in other news Ace’s wife just gave birth to their second child – so please come out and slap on the back, shake his hand, drink a beer and enjoy his reading from The Ranger.

Swamplandia!: The Story Behind the Pick

Not long after I started working at Lemuria last summer, our Random House reps stopped by to pitch some of the upcoming titles to us booksellers.  When they pulled out advanced reader copies of Karen Russell’s  Swamplandia! I thought there was going to be a real knock-down drag-out bookseller battle to see who got their hands on one.  I had never heard of Karen Russell at that point, but it was enough to convince me that I needed to see what she was all about.

I did a little research on Russell and found out that she had been chosen by The New Yorker for their fiction feature “20 Under 40,” which, as the name suggests, provides interviews and stories by 20 writers under 40 that The New Yorker considers to be worth watching and following as their careers unfold. I’m an avid reader of New Yorker fiction picks so I took their choice of Russell to be an excellent sign.

The next week I purchased a copy of Russell’s short story collection St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves and devoured it (much like a girl raised by a wolf, I guess you could say). It’s the kind of short story collection that I could read over and over again, and I wish that my own life was enveloped in the kind of magical realism that Russell invents in St. Lucy’s.  The novel Swamplandia! is an expansion of “Ava Wrestles an Alligator,” the first story in this collection, so I found myself with familiar characters except now they had a back story.

In the New York Times book review Emma Donoghue had this to say about Russell’s magical realism and the evolution of “Ava Wrestles an Alligator” to the novel Swamplandia!:

“The setting and the sisters (Ava and Osceola, a k a Ossie) are the same, but they now benefit from a full back story. It’s easier to care about the pleasures and miseries of life in a failing gator park when we know how the father (the self-proclaimed Chief Bigtree) and his family ended up there, and are led to understand what goes into the routine of putting on death-defying shows every day. If Russell’s style is a North American take on magical realism, then her commitment to life’s nitty-gritties anchors the magic; we are more inclined to suspend disbelief at the moments that verge on the paranormal because she has turned “Swamplandia!” into a credible world.”

I agree with Donoghue 100% when it comes to the believability of Swamplandia!.  Though there is still that sense of magic, the story takes a darker, grittier turn as reality sets in.  It’s the “nitty-gritty” that makes this book truly remarkable. Russell presents you with a quirky, larger than life family—a 13 year old girl whose narration is wise beyond her years, a teenage brother who runs off to work for the rival theme park to save his family, a faux Indian chief father, and a sister who fancies herself in love with a ghost, and yet their story is believable.  When this family and their theme park are torn apart by loss, you can sympathize with them. Despite all of their quirks Russell makes the Bigtrees into a real family struggling with the real loss of both a mother and of the Florida swamplands culture that is all that they know.

Russell is a great new voice for Southern fiction, and we’re so happy to have her visit Lemuria.  I hope you will read her books, come to her signing and reading, and love her work as much as I (and my co-workers) do.

For Russell’s interview with the New Yorker, you can go here.

Karen Russell will be at Lemuria signing and reading today at 5pm. Swamplandia! is our April First Editions Club selection.

Swamplandia! is published by Knopf with a first printing of 40,000. As of today the book is in its 9th printing . . . and counting.  -Kaycie

The Illumination by Kevin Brockmeier

On the surface, Kevin Brockmeier’s new novel might seem a bit weird and “out there”, but as the days pass since I turned the last page a few days ago, I am left with the warm, if rather unexpected, feeling that this is a love story, not presented in traditional form, but in Brockmeier’s original, unique structure. This is the first Brockmeier which I have read. Now, I’m thinking that I need to back up and read A Brief History of the Dead, the 2006 popular release.

Based around a journal, which was compiled from the contents of sticky notes, which were short love phrases and thoughts written daily by a husband to his wife, the short novel upholds the idea of keeping the love alive. However, tragically, the love is cut short by the wife’s untimely and young death from an auto accident.

The love journal switches hands throughout the novel many times, even once being stolen by a young child who takes it home, never telling his parents about his special treasure. Later, after the 10-year-old gives it to a door to door Christian evangelist, the journal serves as a way to remind him of his beloved deceased sister. Finally, the journal falls into the hands of the most unlikely bearer, a street person who makes his living selling used books off the street. While the reader is let into the lives of the diverse owners, he is all the while trying to find the meaning of the novel, essentially the thesis.

Kevin Brockmeier (Photo: Ben Krain)

As I said earlier, this novel has captured my attention more now, a few days later, than it did while I was reading. If someone were to ask me, “What is that novel about?, I would have to say “love”. What becomes clearer and clearer is the even the most distraught, even the most socially unaccepted people, even the most unexpected people have the need to love and be loved, for the novel’s characters are captivated and mesmerized by reading the love journal over and over.

The Illumination by Kevin Brockmeier (Vintage, 2011)

-Nan

House of Prayer No. 2 by Mark Richard

“At night, stray dogs come up underneath our house and lick our leaking pipes.”

I have read this sentence twice now: the first time as the opening sentence of Mark Richard’s short story “Strays,” the opening story in The Ice at the Bottom of the World; the second time as Mark Richard describes a crucial writing moment in his new memoir House of Prayer No. 2 using the unconventional second person.

“The door to the house finally opens, and a rough-looking guy lets Melvin out, and Melvin shakes his hand and comes out to the jeep. You’ve got one of your little notepads on your lap and you need to borrow a pen, and as you drive off he asks you what you are writing, and you don’t answer but what you are writing is: At night, stray dogs come up underneath our house and lick our leaking pipes.”

“. . . you are on your mattress in the hot attic going over At night . . . because you’ve learned that everything you need is in that first line, all you have to do is unpack the story, its metronome is already ticking back and forth.”

Sometimes it’s best to know nothing of an author. Sometimes it’s best not to be anticipating but to simply be open and ready for anything. Reading House of Prayer No. 2 and the stories in The Ice at the Bottom of the World happened simultaneously just because of my innocent curiosity. I was rewarded with the stellar writing style of an author I had never read before and Mark Richard’s account of how The Ice at the Bottom of the World came to be published and then its termination followed with the Pen/Hemingway award in 1990–not to mention the reader reward of learning the story of a “special child” who grew up, realized his passion in life and found his faith.

Bynum writes in The New York Times Book Review that she now understands Richard’s unusual use of the second person in his memoir:

“. . . suddenly the memoir’s reticence, its desultory movement, its use of second person, revealed their purpose to me. To understand the mystery of faith, you cannot be told it; you must experience it yourself.” (Sarah Shun-Lien Bynum, The New York Times Book Review, February 11, 2011)

And I say, too, that you must experience House of Prayer No. 2 for yourself just as I did and let Mark Richard set the metronome with that first line– “say you are a special child . . .”

Join us Tuesday, February 22nd for a signing (5:00) and reading (5:30) with Mark Richard.

Mark Richard is the author of two award-winning short story collections, The Ice at the Bottom of the World and Charity, and the novel Fishboy. His short stories and journalism have appeared in the New York Times, The New Yorker, Harper’s, Esquire, Vogue, and GQ. He is the recipient of the PEN/Hemingway Award, a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship, and a Whiting Foundation Writer’s Award. He lives in Los Angeles with his wife and their three sons.

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