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Staff Picks - Brooks' Bedside Stack
Written by Brooks Preik   
Monday, 02 March 2009 11:30

FlanneryFLANNERY: A LIFE of FLANNERY O’CONNOR
By Brad Gooch 

For diehard fans of Southern literature in the Gothic tradition, Flannery O’Connor, Eudora Welty and Carson McCullers are the indisputable icons. Though her life was cut short by lupus, the same disease that killed her father, the small body of work that Flannery O’Connor produced in her thirty-nine years puts her at the forefront of the greatest writers of the twentieth century. Her fans will be overjoyed to read this just-published biography by Brad Gooch. Shedding new insight upon the life of this complicated writer, Gooch “has composed the life that admirers of the fierce and hilarious Georgia genius have long been hoping for.”  Brad Gooch is the recipient of National Endowment for the Humanities and Gugenheim fellowships and is also the author of a much-acclaimed biography of Frank O’Hara, City Poet. Reviewers of this biography have given Gooch high praise for his work. The Los Angeles Times had this to say: “Not only is this book a joy to read, it’s a necessary chronicle of a fascinating, often overlooked key character in modern American letters.”

I found the book difficult to put down. It was easy to read, very illuminating and written in the style of a true storyteller. I loved it!

Time is a RiverTIME IS A RIVER
By Mary Alice Monroe

For a bit of light entertainment, this book is a quick and easy read. It made the Indie Bound pick list and is the latest of several books by this South Carolina Low Country author.

Mia Landan, recovering from breast cancer, attends a fly-fishing retreat for cancer victims in the beautiful Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina. Returning to her Charleston home unannounced, she surprises her husband in the midst of an adulterous affair and immediately rushes back to her mountain refuge. She is offered the use of a run-down mountain cabin owned by her fly-fishing instructor, Belle Carson. Carson’s grandmother, Kate Watkins. a legendary fly fisher and journalist of the 1920s, was the last resident of the cabin and died there under a cloud of suspicion, accused of murdering her lover. In her quest to deal with the trauma in her own life Mia is irresistibly drawn to the mystery of Kate Watkins, particularly when she discovers Kate’s hidden journals. Surrounded by the beauty and solace of the mountains and the river Mia is able to effect her own personal healing transformation as she concentrates on unraveling the compelling mystery of Kate. There is a poetic lyricism in Monroe’s fiction and a warmth and believability in her characters that leaves the reader with a good feeling.

Monroe’s newest book Last Light over Carolina is scheduled for release in July 2009. It is hoped that we will be able to get her to join us for a booksigning at Two Sisters Bookery soon afterwards.

SweetsmokeSWEETSMOKE
By David Fuller

Another favorite among the books I have recently read is this vivid and very moving fictional account of the life of a slave named Cassius Howard. It is a story of courage and bravery in the midst of almost insurmountable obstacles, and it gives a complete and poignant picture of the indignities and sufferings of daily life in the time of slavery. The meticulous research behind this fiction is evident and adds a dimension of believability that is truly gripping. The story is intriguing, mixing the element of mystery with the pathos of a love story. The author has been a screenwriter for 25 years and the drama he brings to this, his first novel, demonstrate the benefits of his vast experience in that genre.  I would certainly recommend this book and most especially to anyone with a love of history, in particular the Civil War period.

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 12 August 2009 21:46 )
 
Without Precedent PDF Print E-mail
Staff Picks - Brooks' Bedside Stack
Written by Brooks Preik   
Sunday, 30 November 2008 12:35

WITHOUT PRECEDENT

The Life of Susie Marshall Sharp
By Anna R. Hayes

Without PrecedentThis is an extraordinary biography of an even more extraordinary woman who made history as the first woman judge in the state of North Carolina and the first woman in the United States to be elected chief justice of a state Supreme Court. Born in 1907, Susie Sharp dedicated her life to the legal profession and made her mark as one of the pioneers in judicial reform in the state. Anna Hayes, herself an attorney, spent ten years interviewing dozens of family members, friends and colleagues of Judge Sharp and poring over mountains of legal paperwork and the judge’s own detailed journals, to tell the fascinating story of this brilliant and enormously complicated woman. The book is beautifully written and reveals not only the great personal sacrifice it took to be the consummate professional that Susie Sharp became, but also the toll that heartrending family tragedies took upon her life. Judge Sharp was thought to be the “quintessential spinster,” but Hayes gives a fascinating account, with facts gleaned from Sharp’s private journals, of her several poignant love affairs, affairs previously unknown even to close family members. I could not put this book down. I had the good fortune to meet Judge Sharp when I was a teenager. She had relatives in Southport, my hometown, who were dear friends of mine, and I saw her on several occasions when she visited them. She  made an indelible impression on me at the time, and those memories of her made this book even more interesting and appealing to me. A recent review of the biography perhaps says it best.

 

-“-Extremely well written and meticulously documented. It presents a vivid portrait of a highly intelligent, courageous woman who braved many personal tragedies while carving a place of honor in the state's judiciary history.

--A.C. Snow, Raleigh News & Observer

Last Updated ( Sunday, 30 November 2008 17:48 )