North Carolina Writers' Network |
| Home | About Us | Programs | Services | Contact Us | Join |
| Hats Off | Member Readings | Book Buzz | Members-only Website ... [login instructions] |
Long Gone Daddyby Helen Hemphill
The first time I met my grandfather, he was laid up on a porcelain prep
table at the Hamilton-Johnston Funeral Home. His eyes were wide open and he
had a grin on his face, but he was dead as a doornail.
Harlan Q has loved staying with the Hamiltons all summer. After all, he finds funeral work easier that living at home with his zealous father. Now that Grandfather has bit the dust, though, Harlan Q has to convince his Paps, a Bible-thumping minister, to attend to the corpse. With little money and a quickly ripening body on their hands, Harlan Q and his father must tolerate each other for a road trip to Las Vegas. As they drive Grandfather's body back to its home, Harlan Q and his father pick up Warrior, a Hollywood-bound, Zen-minded actor-in-training. Through flat tires, conversations over Chinese food, and a covert trip to a bar, Warrior pushes Harlan Q to forgive his father's single-minded approach to life. More importantly, the trip forces Harlan Q's father to question his feelings about his long gone daddy, which may help him understand his rebellious son. * * * At times rollicking, at times bittersweet, this story of Harlan Q's journey
from Bean Creek, TX to Las Vegas, NV in a Chevy station wagon, with his
grandfather's smiling corpse in the back and his gospel-spewing father at
the wheel, is all about the mystery of fathers and sons, of an ancient
prophet in a new body, of love both conditional and not. Helen Hemphill, in
her debut, gives us a remarkable tale, told in a voice as old and fresh as a
desert breeze.
There's Stanley Yelnats IV and India Opal Buloni, and now there's Harlan Q.
Stank! Hemphill's protagonist leaps right off the page and into your heart.
He's got the voice of a latter day Tom Sawyer, but the raft for his journey
is a '72 Chevy wagon loaded down with a casket, no less. Throw in young
Harlan's Bible thumping daddy and a would-be actor who calls himself Warrior
and you've got a road trip to Vegas you're not likely to forget any time
soon.
Available at online booksellers and on order from your favorite bookstore. ISBN: 1-932425-38-1 |
|