What do you think?
Rate this book
Paperback
First published January 1, 1992
This was my first foray into the writing of author Clyde Edgerton of Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Reading In Memory of Junior taught me this: Clyde Edgerton and I are members of the same tribe. We may well be distant kin, for the extended Southern family he writes about in this book sounds a lot like my own kinfolk.
This story is told by multiple narrators. Thirty years or so ago, a wife and mother deserted her husband and children. She walked away from the family farm without warning, leaving behind a husband and two small children. Her oldest son was seven years old, and the other child was a baby boy who was still nursing when she left. No one in the family ever heard from her again, or at least no one ever admitted to knowing anything about what happened to her or why she so abruptly left.
It’s a story about family secrets.
The plot involves a crazy old uncle, an urge to fly, and a death watch to see who inherits a family farm.
The clan that Clyde Edgerton has created here sounds authentically Carolinian. The family stories and dialect that they share sound comfortably familiar to this Southern ear.
I very much enjoyed this book. Based on this introduction to the author’s work, I will move Clyde Edgerton’s novels into my regular reading rotation.
I found a HB copy in like-new condition on a bookshelf in my basement at home.
My rating: 7.25/10, finished 12/27/23 (3900).
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH