Reviews2023-01-25T09:45:22-06:00

Book Reviews

Petrochemical Nocturne

By Amos Jasper Wright IV University of West Alabama, 2023 Paper, $22.95 Fiction Reviewed by Bill Plott Although a novel, this is also an extraordinary work of history. Using Cancer Alley as a setting, Wright has penned a book that is essentially about racism – the systemic and pervasive racism of not just the South but also the nation. Perhaps no white historian has told it with quite the passion that Wright brings to the table. Cancer Alley is the regional [...]

Outside from the Inside

By Anne Whitehouse Dos Madres, 2020 Cloth: $19.00 Genre: Poetry Reviewed by Foster Dickson Originally from Birmingham, Alabama, Anne Whitehouse writes a highly personal kind of poetry that ranges in subject matter from personal observations to the imaginative consideration of historical figures. Thus, the title of her 2020 collection, published by Dos Madres Press, is quite appropriate: Outside from the Inside. The slim volume contains four sections: “Tides of the Body,” “It Wasn’t An Hallucination,” “The Ancient World,” and “A Dog’s [...]

Space Oddities: Forgotten Stories of Mankind’s Exploration of Space

By Joe Cuhaj Prometheus Books; 2022 Paperback: $21.95 Genre: Science Reviewed by Edward Journey With his heavily researched Space Oddities: Forgotten Stories of Mankind’s Exploration of Space, Joe Cuhaj has tapped into the space aficionado’s desire to know even more about the exploration of the proverbial “final frontier.” The book captures the true breathless fanboy spirit of its New-Jersey born, Alabama-based author who “applied to take part in NASA’s Journalist in Space program but never heard back.” Cuhaj, a Navy veteran [...]

Highway 28 West

By Joe Taylor Sagging Meniscus, 2023 Paperback: $19.95; Kindle: $8.99 Genre: Fiction Reviewed by Danny Gamble  Dust you are, and to dust you will return. Genesis 3:19 Take a cup of existentialism, add a tablespoon of phenomenology, and sprinkle a dash of nihilism. Stir and bake for 109 pages. The result? A Southern Gothic tale that takes no turns off Highway 28 West, the Highway to Hell. In reality, Highway 28 is a stretch of blacktop that runs through Sumpter, Marengo, [...]

Aftershock

By George H. Wolfe Livingston Press, 2022 Paper. $19.95 Genre: Fiction Reviewed by Jim Hilgartner At its most elemental, the narrative in Aftershock, a novel by George H. Wolfe, follows Dante Gabriel Larocca, an Army veteran wounded in a tank battle late in World War II, as he navigates the new battlefield of academia under the GI Bill. But there is nothing elemental about this compelling and complex story, which in lucid and vivid prose intertwines the fortunes of a disparate [...]

Loving Tallulah Bankhead

By Carrie Chappell Paris Heretics, 2022 Paperback Genre: Poetry Reviewed by Bee Baldwin Carrie Chappell’s Loving Tallulah Bankhead is an enchanting celebration of the non-conforming, untraditional, “fallen” women of the South with stage/film actress and Alabama native Tallulah Bankhead as its star. Tallulah starred in movies such as Alfred Hitchcock’s Lifeboat and appeared as Catherine the Great in A Royal Scandal, and she was nearly Gone with the Wind’s Scarlett O’Hara. However, despite this acclaim, Tallulah Bankhead has been viewed as [...]

All Night, All Day: Life, Death and Angels

By Susan Cushman, editor MadVille Publishing, 2023 Paper: $19.95 Genre: Inspirational Reviewed by Cheryl Carpenter Contrary to assurances given to frightened children that “there’s no such thing as ghosts,” the poems, essays, short stories, and art of Susan Cushman’s All Night, All Day: Angels, Life and Death maintain that there are, indeed, ghosts and angels among us all the time. Twenty-five distinguished women – several with Alabama connections – have contributed to this intriguing collection with the common theme that people [...]

Southern Thesaurus: For When You’re Plumb Out of Things to Say

By Kelly Kazek with illustrations by Joshua J. Hamilton Alabama Media Group, 2022 Hardback: $19.99 Genre: Humor Reviewed by Abby McGinn Kelly Kazek is an award-winning journalist and humor columnist. She is the author of 19 books, which include picture books, chronicles of motherhood, and tales from her days as a reporter. She is especially known for writing about Southern culture, and her work currently appears on It’s a Southern Thing and her blog, KellyKazek.com. Her numerous accolades include two Alabama [...]

The Villa

by Rachel Hawkins St. Martin’s Press, 2022 Cloth: $28.99 Genre: Murder mystery Reviewed by Cheryl Carpenter With the simple declaration “Houses remember,” Rachel Hawkins sets the mood for her latest novel, The Villa. Although the book jacket alludes to Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein as one possible influence, I couldn’t help drawing a comparison to Poe’s “House of Usher” or, more particularly, to several Henry James novels in which houses are personified. No Turn of the Screw apparitions are on display in The [...]

Sorry Men in Southern Literature

By Rebecca Browder Home House Press; 2023 Paperback: $14.95 Genre: Short Stories Reviewed by Edward Journey If you’re a child and want to know the details, you must eavesdrop on your parents or the neighborhood ladies gossiping over glasses of iced tea. At least that’s how the reader learns some of the more salacious details in Rebecca Browder’s short story collection, Sorry Men in Southern Literature. These are brave, often sorrowful, slice-of-life stories that are as likely to end on a [...]

The Father Goose Treasury of Poetry

By Charles Ghigna Schiffer Kids, 2023 Hardcover: $24.99 Genre: Children’s Poetry Reviewed by Kelly Kazek I was lucky enough to spend my childhood emersed in rhyme. Both from my maternal grandmother, a writer of children’s poetry, and from the likes of Shel Silverstein and Dr. Seuss. Being able to paint with rhymes is a superpower, one I’m certain is aided by mystical forces, and that is why Charles Ghigna needs a cape. Ghigna, known as Father Goose because he has authored [...]

The Secret Book of Flora Lea

By Patti Callahan Henry Atria Books, An Imprint of Simon & Schuster, Inc., 2023 Hardcover, $28.99 Reviewed by Linda Henry Dean It is hard to imagine a situation in which a loving parent would pack a knapsack for his/her child, hang a luggage tag around the child’s neck (along with a gas mask and a self-addressed postcard to be sent when the child found a home), and put the child on a train bound for an unknown destination with strangers who [...]

One Breath From Drowning

By Kent Quaney University of Wisconsin Press, 2022 Paper: $18 Genre: FictionReviewed by Michel Aaij Kent Quaney comes to us by way of Utah, Australia, and Southern Miss; he now directs the Creative Writing program at Auburn University, Montgomery. One Breath from Drowning is his first novel: it’s a fun read, light in tone but serious in content, and the promise of things to come. The novel recounts the adventures, personal growth, and redemption of Ryan and Sam, two young men [...]

Lures

by Adam Vines Louisiana State University Press, 2022 Paperback: $17.95 Genre: Poetry Review by Ken Autrey In his third book, Adam Vines, who teaches creative writing at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, has fashioned a collection making skilled use of traditional forms, such as the sonnet, triolet, and pantoum, but also nonce forms following various meters and rhyme schemes. Those structural elements mark a distinct change from his previous volume, Out of Speech, a series of ekphrastic poems that [...]

Silver Alert

By Lee Smith Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill; 2023 Hardcover: $27.00 Genre: Fiction Reviewed by Edward Journey Writer Lee Smith’s generosity to aspiring young writers, as well as to her veteran colleagues, is well-documented. She is widely regarded for her encouragement and support. Those traits extend to the characters she creates for the stories she tells – short stories, memoirs, and fifteen novels at last count. Smith’s new novel, Silver Alert, is another sterling example of that generosity of spirit that [...]

This Isn’t Going to End Well

By Daniel Wallace With Illustrations by William Neely Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 2023 $28, Hardcover; $14.99, Kindle Reviewed by Danny Gamble The very early 1970s, Homewood, Alabama, harbored few “hippies.” Daniel Wallace, author of Big Fish and five other novels, introduces two—his sister Holly and her life-long companion, William Neely. Make that three if you count Daniel, and you should. This is his story after all.  His new memoir This Isn’t Going To End Well: The True Story of a [...]

Leave Your Footprint

By Ann Bedsole Hardback: $26 Paperback: $14.50 Reviewed by Don Noble Like many of us, Ann Bedsole felt it wise to stay close to home during the COVID pandemic. Rather than just killing time while avoiding dying, she decided to use the enforced seclusion to write her autobiography, and the result is more revealing and candid and amusing than one would expect from a very well-known public figure. Born in Selma, in 1930, but raised mostly in Jackson, Alabama, Bedsole had [...]

Freedom’s Dominion: A Saga of White Resistance to Federal Power

By Jefferson Cowie Basic Books, 2022 Cloth: $35.00 Genre: History Reviewed by Foster Dickson In his book’s section about the Civil War, historian Jefferson Cowie apprises the reader that neither Eufaula specifically, nor Barbour County more generally were significant locations in the fighting. So, in the scope of Southern history, many may not know about this place. However, the rest of the four-hundred-plus pages in his 2022 book Freedom’s Dominion make sure that we understand how significant this place is, to [...]

Magic City Blues

By Bobby Mathews Shotgun Honey Books; 2023 Paperback: $15.95 Genre: Contemporary Noir Reviewed by Edward Journey Crime writer Bobby Mathews knows Birmingham from back alley to bougie. His new book, Magic City Blues, explores the city in all its variety, serving at times as a travelogue as well as a hard-boiled whodunnit. Mathews’s self-proclaimed “checkered past” includes award-winning journalism and short crime fiction; his crime novel about professional wrestling, Living the Gimmick, was published in 2022. Magic City Blues is raucous [...]

Walking on Cowrie Shells: Stories

By Nana Nkweti Graywolf Press, 2021 Paperback, $10.99 Genre: Short Fiction Reviewed by Don Noble Unless by some chance you are familiar with the intricacies and difficulties of Cameroonian culture in America, you have never read anything like these stories by Nana Nkweti. They are ten stories—all fully developed. No short-shorts here. The shortest ones are eight and twelve pages; most are 20 or more and fully satisfying. Nkweti writes of the stresses in the community—between African-Americans and Africans, those who [...]

Fables and Stories: Tales from an Alabama Troubadour

By Rick CarterPrairie Eden Music, 2021$25, Paper; $9.99, KendleReviewed by Danny GambleAnyone who has spent any time in the Wooden Nickel in Birmingham, The War Eagle Supper Club in Auburn, the Flora-Bama on the Gulf Coast, or any one of numerous music festivals and beer joints throughout the Southeast and beyond knows the name Rick Carter, or if not, they certainly know his music. Whether performing with Telluride, Rollin’ in the Hay, or Franky Velvet and the Mighty Veltones, Carter and [...]

Twilight of the Confederacy: The Alabama Corps of Cadets and the Burning of the University of Alabama

By Terry BarkleyBlue Rooster Press; 2022Paperback: $19.95Genre: Civil War HistoryReviewed by Edward JourneyWriter Terry Barkley fires the opening volley in his compact military history, Twilight of the Confederacy: The Alabama Corps of Cadets and the Burning of the University of Alabama, charging that the University of Alabama “is playing down or hiding its Confederate heritage.” He argues that, contrary to contemporary trends, the University of Alabama’s Civil War story is one “that needs to be told.”After airing his concerns in the [...]

Ancient Life in Alabama: The Fossils, the Finders & Why it Matters

By William G. DeutschMindbridge Press, 2022Hardcover: $32Genre: NonfictionReviewed by Jim BufordPreorder here Dr. Bill Deutsch, a retired researcher and educator at Auburn University, has followed up his acclaimed first book, Alabama Rivers, with a new book entitled Ancient Life in Alabama: The Fossils, the Finders & Why It Matters.Alabama has fossil-bearing rocks from the Cambrian Period to the more recent past when the world we know now was beginning to emerge, a timeframe spanning approximately 500 million years, i.e., “deep time.” Note [...]

Of Mules and Mud: The Story of Alabama Folk Potter Jerry Brown

By Jerry Brown, edited and with an introduction by Joey BracknerThe University of Alabama Press; 2022Paperback: $22.95Genre: Folk Art / Alabama / BiographyReviewed by Edward JourneyAnyone who had the opportunity to hear traditional pottery artist Jerry Brown hold forth at the Kentuck Arts and Crafts Festival, or other regional and national arts and crafts events (including the Jerry Brown Arts festival in Hamilton, Alabama), knows that nobody could tell Jerry Brown’s compelling story as well as Jerry Brown himself. Brown left [...]

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