Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
A vivid portrait of legendary liquor agent Garland Bunting, an American original who patrolled rural North Carolina when moonshiners still patrolled the backcountry.
For thirty-five years, Garland Bunting slid his "sweet potato shape--small at both ends and big in the middle" onto the front seat of his beat-up pickup with the coon dogs in the back to ride around in pursuit of moonshine stills in Halifax County, North Carolina. Bunting was true a one-of-a-kind, a man who would do nearly anything to get his culprit. To best the bootleggers, Bunting passed himself off as an outrageous array of characters, including a door-to-door fish peddler, a preacher, a farmer, a fox hunter, a sawmill worker, and a woman.
Articulate, canny, imaginative, and aware--aware even that he's an unusual character--Bunting fills the foreground of Alec Wilkinson's deeply reported and elegantly told story.
Moonshine is a wonderfully alive portrait of both Bunting and rural North Carolina's coastal plain, with its landscape of small farms, woods, and swamps. We meet the people Bunting grew up with, his fellow liquor agents, his cronies, and his shy wife, Colleen. Along the way, we learn the history of moonshine and how it is made, and accompany Bunting on the stake-out of a small, backwoods still.
Full of humor, energy, and a deeply haunting quality, the flavors of the past and present are richly intermingled in Moonshine.
This Nonpareil edition includes a new introduction by acclaimed author Padgett Powell.