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Monday, 4 February 2019

2 BY WILLIAM GAY

A couple this week from William Gay, not an author I have had the pleasure of reading yet. I've heard his work classed as literary and Southern Gothic whatever that means.

Little Sister Death has undertones of a ghost story and supernatural elements, which I used to read a lot of when I was younger. Stoneburner seems a bit more like my usual reading - a hard-boiled detective story.
























William Gay passed in 2012 and both these books have since been published posthumously along with last year's The Lost Country.

He had three novels published in his lifetime - The Long Home, Provinces of Night and Twilight.

His New York Times obituary is here.









Little Sister Death (2015)

David Binder is a young, successful writer living in Chicago and suffering from writer's block. He stares at the blank page, and the blank page stares back - until inspiration strikes in the form of a ghost story that captivated him as a child. With his pregnant wife and young daughter in tow, he sets out to explore the myth of Virginia Beale, Faery Queen of the Haunted Dell. But as his investigation takes him deeper and deeper into the legacy of blood and violence that casts its shadow over the old Beale farm, Binder finds himself obsessed with a force that's as wicked as it is seductive.

A stirring literary rendition of Tennessee's famed Curse of the Bell Witch, Little Sister Death skillfully toes the line between Southern Gothic and horror and further cements William Gay's legacy as not only one of the South's finest writers but among the best that American literature has to offer.



Stoneburner (2017)

Stoneburner is a hardboiled detective story written as only William Gay could do it. The story is set in the mid 1970s and includes a jaded private eye named Stoneburner, a redneck Vietnam vet named Thibodeaux, a beautiful young blonde named Cathy Meecham and an ex-Sheriff named Cap Holder loosely based on Buford Pusser. Stoneburner is the private eye who has abandoned his office in Memphis to live on the banks of the Tennessee River where he is building a cabin. The story follows him as he meets a local retired sheriff who made a fortune when Hollywood produced a movie based on his exploits cleaning up the drug dealers in his rural county. However, now the Sheriff, Cap Holder, has run through the money on ill conceived business plans, fancy cars, big boats and expensive young girlfriends. He comes to Stoneburner when his plans to recoup his losses on a coke deal goes wrong and the young girlfriend turns up missing, both at the same time.

Cap wants Stoneburner to find both the money and the girl. The redneck named Thibodeaux just happened to be in the right place at the wrong time and was able to make off with a briefcase full of drug money and the young blonde. Thibodeaux and the girl are on the run, moving across Tennessee, Mississippi and Arkansas, leaving a trail a mile wide with Stoneburner not far behind. Thibodeaux and the girl buy a Cadillac purportedly owned by Elvis which eventually ends up in the top of a tree in the Ozarks. Stoneburner quickly figures out that he is not the only person that wants to find Thibodeaux. The drug lord, a local Nashville music producer, who was supplying the cocaine is on the trail as well.

The book follows two tracks, starting with Thibodeaux who is living in rural Tennessee and getting by as best he can. He is a town drunk constantly in trouble with the law, leaving behind a string of wrecked cars and trucks. However, his luck changes one night when he figures out someone is using an abandoned airstrip to fly in drugs and cases it out until one night a plane lands and he is able to make off with a briefcase full of cash. Once he has the money he is able to pick up the blonde, who was double-crossing both Cap Holder and the drug dealers, and away they go.




14 comments:

  1. Col, I haven't read a lot of Gothic, leave alone Southern Gothic. I wonder if Southern Gothic refers to Gothic fiction from southern America. Meanwhile, I look forward to your thoughts on LITTLE SISTER DEATH. Impressive cover.

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    1. I believe it does Prashant. I've done a bit of googling on authors bracketed as such - there are some impressive names... William Faulkner, Erskine Caudwell, Larry Brown, Harry Crews, James Dickey, Joe R. Lansdale, Tom Franklin, Flannery O'Connor - to go with a few that have a presence in the tubs.

      If I'm honest I probably favour STONEBURNER over LITTLE SISTER DEATH.

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  2. These sound interesting, Col. I'm not usually one for ghost stories, but when that plot point is done right, it can work well. And both stories really sound very Southern, and that setting can be very effective.

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    1. Thanks Margot. I do think I will enjoy his work when I eventually get around to reading him.

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  3. Gay's been in my sights for a while. Guess I'd better do something about it . . .

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    1. I think they all have received some measure of praise. I'll be keen to hear how you get on with him.

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  4. Col – The rural South always makes a great setting. Thanks for bringing these books to our attention.

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    1. Thanks. On reflection, I like books a bit more than pizza!

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  6. I have not heard of this author, not sure I want to read about the rural South, given my origins. But I can wait until you read them and report on them and see.

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    1. Ok I'll try and move one of Gay's up to near the top of the to be read soon-ish pile! I do like books set in the south myself, but I don't read enough of them.

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  7. I'm like Tracy - I might be tempted by one of these, but will wait till you've read them first...

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