Issue #0
It was a fire that could be seen for miles, a fire that split the community, a fire that turned families on each other, a fire that it's still hard to get a straight answer about. A quarter of a century ago, someone held a match to Greenwood, Texas's cotton.Stephen Graham Jones was twelve that year. What he remembers best, what's stuck with him all this time, is that nobody ever came forward to claim that destruction.And nobody was ever caught.Greenwood just leaned forward into next year’s work, and the year after that, pretending that the fire had never happened. But it had.This fire, it didn't start twenty-five years ago. It had been smoldering for years by then. And everybody knew it. Getting them to say anything about it's another thing, though. Some secrets were buried on purpose.Now Stephen's going back the only way he knows how: with a pen. His first time back since he graduated high school. There's questions to be asked, there's stories to be recorded, and pieces of other stories that can be put together.Packed with small-town paranoia, mystery, and more secrets than your average graveyard, Growing Up Dead in Texas is Stephen Graham Jones' breakout novel. It's a story about farming. It's a story about Texas. It's a story about finally standing up from the dead, and walking away. And then going back one more time, when it's supposed to have been long enough ago already that you can deal with it as just events, as just facts.In the tradition of Robert McCammon's A Boy's Life and Tobias Wolff's This Boy's Life, Growing up Dead in Texas is a narrative lens onto the past, to see where things started. And where they keep starting again and again.
Owner | Roger D. Sarao, Jr. |
---|---|
Location | Library: Coffee Table, "Just Read" Stack |
Purchased | Apr 14, 2012 for $ 0.01 at Guy Intoci, NY |
Condition | 1.5. Good Plus (G+)/Very Good Minus (VG-) |
Quantity | 1 |
Read | Jun 25, 2012 |
Added Date | Apr 15, 2012 04:37:08 |
Modified Date | Nov 16, 2016 16:00:09 |
04/14/12: Got this free ARC of Stephen's new book in the mail today. The editor, Guy Intoci, posted on The Velvet that he had copies and I asked for one. Very cool! (RDS)
07/04/12: A "breakthrough" novel for Stephen? I hope so. It's damn good. I promised to write a review. (RDS)