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A Killing in This Town

A Killing in This Town Cover

ISBN13: 9780802118134
ISBN10: 0802118135
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Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

Olympia Vernon's raw and formidable talents were on arresting display in Eden and Logic. Her third novel, A Killing in This Town, is a taut, poetic master piece that exhumes a horrific epoch from the annals of the American South. There is a menace in the woods of Bullock County, Mississippi, and not only for the black man destined to be lynched when a white boy comes of age. The white men who work at the Pauer Plant are in danger, too, but they refuse to heed Earl Thomas's urgent message that the factory is slowly killing them; turning a deaf ear to the black pastor's warning, they are determined to carry on as they always have. Earl Thomas knows he should try to deliver the message again, but he hears the blood of his murdered friend, Curtis Willow, calling to him from the ground, and fears that he will be the next black man to be dragged to his death. Adam Pickens, the white boy now on the eve of his thirteenth birthday, isn't sure he wants to wear the garb being readied for him by the Klan seamstress, or participate in the town's ugly ritual. It is only when Gill Mender--a man haunted by past sins--returns to town that redemption seems possible. A transfixing and pivotal work of fiction, A Killing in This Town exposes the fragile hierarchy of a society poisoned by hatred, and shows the power of an individual to stand up to the demons of history and bring the cycle of violence to an end.

Review:

"The horrors of the lynch mob inform every paragraph of this viscerally moving novel that gives the backstory to the 1998 James Byrd murder. In Jim Crow — era Bullock, Miss., a white boy's passage into manhood demands a grotesque ritual: he must 'go out to a nigger's house and call him out of it' and, with his fellow Klansmen, drag him to death behind a horse. Preacher Earl Thomas knows that he will be 'called out' next, just as white Adam Pickens, soon to turn 13, dreads the part he must play in this imminent killing. Will these characters find a way out of the cycle of violence? Rejecting the conventions of chronology and character development, Vernon collapses time: memory, dream and portent are ever-present as characters wrestle with ghosts, guilt, fear and the chance of hope. A fugue of folk idiom, blues, biblical diction and surreal imagery makes for lots of atmosphere, but characters without much dimension: blacks are scarcely individuated; whites are mere repositories of cretinous hatred. As a result, while the stench of evil wafts nauseatingly from the page, the actual lives remain strangely distant." Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)

Synopsis:

From an award-winning and critically acclaimed writer comes a searing novel about a small Mississippi town trapped in a cycle of racism and violence, and the two boys who heroically defy tradition and seek an end to the injustice. Olympia Vernon's third novel, A Killing in This Town, is a taut, poetic masterpiece that exhumes a horrific epoch from the annals of the American South. There is a menace in the woods of Bullock, Mississippi, and not only for the black man destined to be lynched when a white boy comes of age. The white men who work at the Pauer Plant are in danger, too, but they refuse to heed pastor Earl Thomas's urgent message that the factory is slowly killing them. It is only when Gill Mender — a man haunted by past sins — returns to town that change seems possible. A transfixing and pivotal work of fiction, A Killing in This Town exposes the fragile hierarchy of a society poisoned by hatred, and shows the power of an individual to stand up to the demons of history and bring the cycle of violence to an end.

Synopsis:

From an award-winning and critically acclaimed writer comes a searing novel about a small Mississippi town trapped in a cycle of racism and violence, and the two boys who heroically defy tradition and seek an end to the injustice.

What Our Readers Are Saying

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Average customer rating based on 1 comment:

Tom Honea, April 27, 2011 (view all comments by Tom Honea)
remember the name: Olympia Vernon. you will come across it from time to time for decades to come. she will be a force in american literature: black and female and southern.
... and ...
this is not a bedtime read. you have to be awake. you have to pay attention! ms. vernon makes you work for the goodies. the voice is poetic, mystic, dreamlike. i found myself at the end of a sentence, a paragraph, asking myself, "how did she think of that? .. those words!" and, they were perfect.
the characters are shadows, yet good balances evil. we clearly see the inner struggles. .. the plot, the action, is seen through a fog that moves in and out. still, the gripping suspense builds and builds. you, we, the reader, know what is happening and yet are compelled to read to the last page, and beyond.
one wonders how so young a woman can plum the depths of the Jim Crow south, how she can write this story.
the answer is simple: she lived there.
Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No

Product Details

ISBN:
9780802118134
Subtitle:
A Novel
Publisher:
Grove Press
Author:
Vernon, Olympia
Subject:
Literary
Subject:
Boys
Subject:
Working class
Subject:
FICTION / Literary
Edition Description:
Trade Cloth
Publication Date:
20060105
Binding:
Hardback
Language:
English
Pages:
256
Dimensions:
8.25 x 5.5 in 14 oz
A Killing in This Town
0 stars - 0 reviews
$ In Stock
Product details 256 pages Grove Press - English 9780802118134 Reviews:
"Publishers Weekly Review" by , "The horrors of the lynch mob inform every paragraph of this viscerally moving novel that gives the backstory to the 1998 James Byrd murder. In Jim Crow — era Bullock, Miss., a white boy's passage into manhood demands a grotesque ritual: he must 'go out to a nigger's house and call him out of it' and, with his fellow Klansmen, drag him to death behind a horse. Preacher Earl Thomas knows that he will be 'called out' next, just as white Adam Pickens, soon to turn 13, dreads the part he must play in this imminent killing. Will these characters find a way out of the cycle of violence? Rejecting the conventions of chronology and character development, Vernon collapses time: memory, dream and portent are ever-present as characters wrestle with ghosts, guilt, fear and the chance of hope. A fugue of folk idiom, blues, biblical diction and surreal imagery makes for lots of atmosphere, but characters without much dimension: blacks are scarcely individuated; whites are mere repositories of cretinous hatred. As a result, while the stench of evil wafts nauseatingly from the page, the actual lives remain strangely distant." Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)
"Synopsis" by ,
From an award-winning and critically acclaimed writer comes a searing novel about a small Mississippi town trapped in a cycle of racism and violence, and the two boys who heroically defy tradition and seek an end to the injustice. Olympia Vernon's third novel, A Killing in This Town, is a taut, poetic masterpiece that exhumes a horrific epoch from the annals of the American South. There is a menace in the woods of Bullock, Mississippi, and not only for the black man destined to be lynched when a white boy comes of age. The white men who work at the Pauer Plant are in danger, too, but they refuse to heed pastor Earl Thomas's urgent message that the factory is slowly killing them. It is only when Gill Mender — a man haunted by past sins — returns to town that change seems possible. A transfixing and pivotal work of fiction, A Killing in This Town exposes the fragile hierarchy of a society poisoned by hatred, and shows the power of an individual to stand up to the demons of history and bring the cycle of violence to an end.
"Synopsis" by , From an award-winning and critically acclaimed writer comes a searing novel about a small Mississippi town trapped in a cycle of racism and violence, and the two boys who heroically defy tradition and seek an end to the injustice.
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