Dorothy Allison, Bastard Out of Carolina (1992)

CW: This novel contains scenes depicting the sexual assault and abuse of a child.

If you grew up in the Deep South, the sound of cicadas and the rustling of Spanish moss in the afternoon wind will be as familiar to you as the air you breathe. If you’re not from the South, and you have no idea what I’m talking about, then pick up Bastard Out of Carolina and you will feel like you’ve spent your entire life in the South Carolina backcountry. Dorothy Allison’s 1992 novel absorbs traditional Southern gothic tropes and repurposes them to create a haunting, bittersweet story that will stick in your brain long after you’ve reached the back cover. The novel focuses on Bone, a young girl who grows up in an impoverished, tight-knit family near Greensboro, South Carolina. Allison creates a world at the beginning of the novel that enfolds you in the smell of Bone’s grandmother’s cooking, the playful screams of her cousins running rampant through the front yard, and the boisterous banter of her many aunts and uncles. In beautifully vivid prose, Dorothy Allison makes you count yourself among the members of Bone’s family after the first few chapters. Her ability to build this world and create characters that feel so real is the strong point of the novel. Continue reading “Dorothy Allison, Bastard Out of Carolina (1992)”

Attica Locke, The Cutting Season

Sitting on the banks of the Mississippi river, Belle Vie has everything one could want in a southern plantation turned historic site and venue: an opulent big house, beautifully groomed grounds, and an unsettling past. But when the body of a migrant worker is found in one of the enslaved workers’ cabins, the present proves just as challenging. Continue reading “Attica Locke, The Cutting Season”

Wanda M. Morris, Anywhere You Run

Wanda Morris’s Anywhere You Run is one of the latest successes to come from 2022. The book focuses on the game of cat and mouse that falls under the umbrella of the crime genre. The book is labeled a crime thriller, yet there isn’t an element of suspense that’s typically expected for a thriller. The novel is divided into two parts, and the chapters switch between three different points of view, Marigold, Violet, and Mercer, which is a layout I really enjoyed reading. Some themes of the novel may be hard to read and are better suited for ages 13+.

The book is set in a medium-sized town in Mississippi in the summer of 1964. The South is still holding onto Jim Crow Laws as two black sisters, Marigold and Violet, are finding themselves on very different paths in life. 

Continue reading “Wanda M. Morris, Anywhere You Run”

Amy Greene, Long Man

Welcome to Yuneetah, Tennessee. This rural, hardscrabble community set in the 1930s in East Tennessee holds tightly to their rich history through a deep connection to the land. When the Tennessee Valley Authority plans to dam the river and flood the town of Yuneetah, the inhabitants are forced to relocate. Some go willingly, eager to aid East Tennessee’s promise of “progression.” Others, such as Annie Clyde Dodson, are not willing to part with their land so easily.

Annie’s connection to the farm and desire to pass it down to her daughter, Gracie, makes her unwilling to desert her beloved land. When Gracie disappears, the Dodson family must grapple with the truth of the people around them in order to find their child. Continue reading “Amy Greene, Long Man”

Donna Tartt, The Little Friend

The murder of Harriet Cleve Dufresnes’s older brother Robin, who was found hanging from a tree in the backyard, still remains a mystery twelve years later. The conflicting reality of the tragedy impacts Harriet one summer as she finds herself engrossed with the works of adventure writers like Kipling and Stevenson. Driven by unanswered questions that left her and her family shattered years ago – even today, as their mother remains enveloped in grief through hoarding and medication, which has caused immense neglect on her behalf – Harriet becomes determined to uncover the truth. Believing that members of the Ratliff family, a highly dysfunctional family also from Alexandria, Mississippi may be responsible, Harriet sets out with Hely, a neighborhood friend. The mystery must be solved. Continue reading “Donna Tartt, The Little Friend”

William Faulkner, Light in August (1932)

…but is it a crime novel?

William Faulkner’s Light in August isn’t a traditional mystery in any sense, but it certainly is a crime novel. It’s the story of Joanna Burden’s death – a middle-aged single woman living alone on the edge of town – and Joe Christmas, the reclusive bootlegger accused of her murder. It’s also the story of a trio of social outcasts Continue reading “William Faulkner, Light in August (1932)”