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Book Buzz

Book Buzz is for press releases about new books and publications by our members. To submit your book to Book Buzz, send an email to bookbuzz@ncwriters.org

Be sure to include the following information:

  • a paragraph description of your book
  • ISBN#, price, publisher
  • title and author
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SETTLING PDF Print E-mail
Written by Joan L. Cannon   
Friday, 11 April 2008 22:02
SETTLING, Novel
by Joan L. Cannon
ISBN 1-59431-493-4,
trade paperback, 16.95.
SettlingCannon's novel Settling was released by Cambridge Books in March. Also available as an e-book, it can be ordered from Cambridge Books, Amazon, or from the author. Ruth Duchamp leaves New York to come to terms with a future she fears. She and her husband Alex married not so much in haste as with too little self-knowledge. Attractive without being conventionally pretty, red-haired Ruth is a product of the rock-bound coast of Maine with all that implies. Alex, an orphan from a small Quebec town, is so handsome he turns heads wherever he goes. Reared by a simple couple who adopted him, he has always felt out of place. After meeting Ruth in New York, Alex is intrigued by her differences from other women he has known, and she is drawn by his extraordinary looks and air of mystery. Over the years, disappointments and unrealized hopes make Alex vulnerable to a predatory woman, but Ruth refuses to give him a divorce. Here is a story about faith and fortitude for readers of romance and mainstream.
 

For Ruth it's as if she's lost her youthful love of sensory appreciation of her surroundings, a "fleshly and spiritual frailty" that can only be healed by connecting with the earth. A job with a caring physician and his family, plus the frank and poetic touch of Nettie - a landlady become friend, awaken Ruth to who she really is and what she truly wants in a relationship. Why is she hanging on to Alex, separate but not divorced?

For Alex, his spirit longs for freedom from the rigid atmosphere he knew as an orphan in a French, Catholic orphanage and later as the adopted son of staid parents. Creativity in the theatre restores his spirit temporarily but fails to fill the emotional and spiritual chasm within.

Beautiful and beautifully written story!!!

CRYSTAL REVIEWS  www.crystalreviews.com

 
Last Updated ( Friday, 11 April 2008 22:06 )
 
Family Bible PDF Print E-mail
Written by Melissa J. Delbridge   
Wednesday, 02 April 2008 08:36

Family Bible
By Melissa J. Delbridge

Sightline Books: The Iowa Series in Literary Nonfiction 

168 pages, 5 3/4 x 9 1/4 inches, 2008
$23.95 cloth, 1-58729-651-9, 978-1-58729-651-2

Family Bible“Delbridge knows sorrow like she knows the rhythm of her own heart. . . . Fans of Carson McCullers won't want to miss this one—witty, tragic, and relentlessly wise.”—Booklist, starred review

"Melissa Delbridge's memories of her early life are dead—accurate, hilarious, and tragic and will surely prove enduring as a guide to the Deepest South—a place and a culture that continue to prove alarmingly vital. I mean to keep the book handy, for pleasure and real guidance."—Reynolds Price

"Family Bible is a gritty coming-of-age story set on the banks of the Black Warrior River in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, with everything one expects of the Deep South: incest (some willing, some not), guns, bourbon, insanity, Jesus, fast women, cheating men. But Melissa Delbridge explodes and exploits these clichés into something startling and new, and in spite of the horror aroused by some events, it's a hell of a fun ride. Delbridge's ability to bring such joy to her readers through narratives that contain so much quiet sorrow is a true testament to her understanding of what it means to persevere."—Jennifer S. Davis, author, Our Former Lives in Art

"Melissa Delbridge chronicles her journey toward self-realization with startling freshness and humor. I highly recommend it."—Bev Marshall, author, Right As Rain, Walking through Shadows, and Hot Fudge Sundae Blues

"Family Bible took me home. Reading it was like going to a reunion. All the people I wanted to see were there, fully there. All the people I never wanted to see again were there as well! It was deliciously painful. She captured the past, in character and place, and brought them to life in the now."—Steven Sherrill, author, The Minotaur Takes a Cigarette Break, Visits from the Drowned Girl, and The Locktender's House

"Melissa Delbridge's Family Bible is one of the most memorable books to come my way in a long time. She writes with grace, love, and understanding. Her ear is pitch perfect, and her eye misses nothing, not even the smallest detail. Put this one on a shelf where you can find it easily, because if you're like me, you'll want to re-read it again and again."—Steve Yarbrough, author, The End of California

"What a solid, warm embrace Melissa Delbridge offers the South in her memoir. But don't think she's not able, somehow, to keep eye contact with what's behind her, literally and figuratively. Family Bible is a true triumph, and proves that there's no such thing as moderation down here."—George Singleton, author, Work Shirts for Madmen

"Melissa J. Delbridge writes with a watch-maker's eye and a warrior's brave heart. Family Bible is wonderful."—Marshall Chapman, songwriter/rocker/author of Goodbye, Little Rock and Roller

"Swimming and sex seemed a lot alike to me when I was growing up. You took off most of your clothes to do them and you only did them with people who were the same color as you. As your daddy got richer, you got to do them in fancier places." Starting with her father, who never met a whitetail buck he couldn't shoot, a whiskey bottle he couldn't empty, or a woman he couldn't charm, and her mother, who "invented road rage before 1960," Melissa Delbridge introduces us to the people in her own family bible. Readers will find elements of Southern Gothic and familiar vernacular characters, but Delbridge endows each with her startling and original interpretation. In this disarmingly unguarded and unapologetic memoir, she shows us what really happened in the "stew of religion and sex" that was 1960s Tuscaloosa.

Whether telling of her father's circumspect "hunting trips," her mother's sudden, tempestuous moves across town in the middle of the night, or coming to terms with her own sexuality on the banks of the river, Delbridge is the real star of this entertaining memoir. Crackling with wit, frighteningly smart, both drop-dead funny and wrenchingly sad, Family Bible is a stunning personal history.

Melissa Delbridge has published essays and short stories in the Antioch Review, Southern Humanities Review, Third Coast, and other journals. She is an archivist in the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library at Duke University. Delbridge lives with her family in Orange County, North Carolina, where she spends her leisure time letting the dogs in and out, making pickles, plotting vengeance, substantiating rumors, and working on a novel.

Excerpt from Family Bible

When my father came back out to the car with a sack under his arm and got situated beside me, I asked him, "Daddy, what do people do in the Jungle Club?"

My mother answered for him in her Liz Taylor-doing-Tennessee Williams voice, moving her lips in an exaggerated manner and speaking through clenched teeth. "Oh, they just sit around drinking and telling lies and slipping their hands up their buddies' wives' skirts. And darling, your daddy's just about the best person in Tuscaloosa County you could ask that particular question."

 
Black Pearls, a Faerie Strand PDF Print E-mail
Written by Louise Hawes   
Tuesday, 01 April 2008 21:52
Black Pearls, a Faerie Strand 
by Louise Hawes
 

·  Publisher: Houghton Mifflin

·  Hardcover: 224 pages

·  Pub date: May 19, 2008

·  ISBN-10: 0618747974

·  ISBN-13: 978-0618747979

·  Price: $16.00

 
. . . and they lived happily ever after.” Remember the fairy tales you put away after you found that no princess is as beautiful as common sense and happy endings are just the beginning? Well, the old tales are back, and they’ve grown up! Black Pearls brings you the stories of your childhood, told in a way you’ve never heard before. Instead of lulling you to sleep, they’ll wake you up to the haunting sadness that waits just inside the windows of a gingerbread cottage, the passion that fuels a witch’s flight, and the heartache that comes, again and again, at the stroke of midnight. Make no mistake: these stories are as dark as human nature itself. But they shine, too, lit with the fire of our dreams and our hunger for magic.
    Louise Hawes, who lives in Pittsboro and taught the short story course at the Network's fall conference, is the author of an adult fiction collection and many novels for young readers. She is a faculty member of the Vermont College MFA in Writing program, and also teaches at Meredith College's Focusing on Form, a summer writing workshop for women. She has always loved fairy tales and says that "'Black Pearls"' was written for readers of any age who dance without looking at the clock. 
 
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Hat's Off!

...to Dody Williams. She won first place and $1500 in the Memoirs Ink Contest. Her story, Pink Slip, will appear on their website at www.memoirsink.com and in their published anthology. Dody Williams learned about the contest from NC Writers' Network Submit It Section.

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