Warning: self-promotion
One of the
most treasured things ever written about one of my books was the title of an
amazon.com review of The Backside of
Nowhere written by Linda Linguvic, a reviewer from New York
City: “Move over
Pat Conroy. There’s a new Southern writer in town.”
I just
finished reading Conroy’s The Prince of
Tides, and I am stunned. The emotional impact of that book is akin to what
I imagine someone might feel after electroshock or after recovering lost
memories.
I have
enjoyed the three books of Conroy’s that I have read, but not uncritically. His
humor can be wonderful, but sometimes a tad slick. His descriptive passages are
often marvelous and lyrical, but he is overly verbose (is that redundant?). As
a fellow Southerner (I’m an ex-pat Southernerner; he has mostly stayed there),
I am blown away by how deeply he loves the South while being horrified by its
racism and small-mindedness and stupidity. The thing that bothers me the most
about Conroy is that he seems to be full of himself. Each of his books that I
have read—Beach Music, The Prince of Tides, and South of Broad—is written in the first
person by a protagonist I can’t help but see as Conroy himself, and while his
narrator/protagonists are extremely self-critical, their self-criticism comes
across as prideful. This I do not like about his books, and yet . . . and yet,
not since reading Steinbeck’s East of
Eden have I read such a powerful novel as Prince of Tides.
When I finally reached the epilogue on page 554, I
could hardly wait to find out how he was going to wrap things up, but at the
same time I dreaded reaching the last page. What could I do then? Find another
Conroy book to read? Go back to page one and start over?
I am
flattered that the critic chose to compare me favorably to Conroy, but I cannot
help but feel inadequate in comparison. I certainly do not have his gift of
language, nor do I have the guts to open myself up in the way he does. I don’t
think I could ever express in writing the kind of passion his characters
express, because I have never felt such passion.
So thank
you, Linda Linguvic for your kind review. I hope I can live up to it in future
books. Here is her review of The Backside
of Nowhere:
Set in a Gulf
Coast town, this novel does more than just give us a story typical of the
region. Yes, it includes high school romances, a competitive football game,
corrupt political leaders and a devastating hurricane. And yes, it deals with
the endemic racism inherent in such towns. But yet the story is so engrossing
that I could not put the book down. I loved the characters, including a
Hollywood star who comes home to visit his ailing father. Naturally, he meets
up with his old-time girlfriend and they reignite their high school romance. We
learn about his parents' background and his adopted sister with a secret. Then
there is his sister who loves her hard drinking husband no matter how much he
strays. All these characters came across as very real and there is a slight
comic nature to the book which made it even more interesting to me and kept the
story moving.
Frankly, I loved this book and actually found it better than Pat Conroy's latest, "South of Broad" because the characters seemed more real and not just stereotypes. Alec Clayton hit the mark perfectly, held my interest throughout and even surprised me at the end. Bravo! This is a really good book. - Linda Linguvic (New York City), amazon.com
Frankly, I loved this book and actually found it better than Pat Conroy's latest, "South of Broad" because the characters seemed more real and not just stereotypes. Alec Clayton hit the mark perfectly, held my interest throughout and even surprised me at the end. Bravo! This is a really good book. - Linda Linguvic (New York City), amazon.com
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