On the Southern Literary Trail discussion
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Buddy Read: The Clearing by Tim Gautreaux
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Sara
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Sep 30, 2017 09:19AM

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I read this about 3 years ago, so won't re-read, but I'd love to follow the discussion. It's a great book.


Wonderful! What a fantastic idea to cruise the bayou. I am very excited about reading this after loving The Missing.
Diane wrote: "I read this about 3 years ago, so won't re-read, but I'd love to follow the discussion. It's a great book."
I hope you will chime in, Diane. Doesn't matter when you read it. I know you always have something worthwhile to add.

I had scheduled 'The Tall Woman' this month as my reading tribute to Kirk's favorites list, but instead will be honored and delighted to join you in this buddy read. I have the book and can start whenever you're ready.


Chandler, The Tall Woman is excellent. You have lots of great reading ahead.


Sorry you can't find your copy, Sue. Very frustrating...been there. Hope you can get it at the library.




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I plan to join you soon. Loved the quote on your status update - it definitely the tone for this one.



Hope to see him tomorrow at the Southern Festival of Books. I have not met him before. He's on a panel, "Mountain to Mountain: Appalachian Stories" with Ron Rash.

He is certainly impressive when he talks about the steamships and trains, LeAnne. I loved that aspect of The Missing, and I'm thrilled to find it figures into this novel as well.


I gave it 5-stars and enjoyed it completely. Kirk knew a good book when he read one.



Yesterday at the Southern Festival of Books this was my favorite panel. Tim (bc his last name is too hard for me to spell) read from his new collection of short stories. He had the audience in stitches by reading the first five pages of Attitude Adjustment in the collection called Signals. If you get to take a look at this collection be sure to look that one up. Hilarious!

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It's nerdy, but we enjoy it. It usually falls on our anniversary weekend. So it's books and dinner. It seems to work.

I'm over halfway through and find myself somewhat hypnotized. This guy writes incredible dialogue. And I can see and smell and taste and feel every single scene I'm reading.

Chandler wrote: "I'm over halfway through and find myself somewhat hypnotized. This guy writes incredible dialogue. And I can see and smell and taste and feel every single scene I'm reading."
It's been a while since I've read it but I seem to recall that there were some scenes that I would have no desire whatsoever to smell, taste and feel. Still, it was an awesome book that I really need to reread.
It's been a while since I've read it but I seem to recall that there were some scenes that I would have no desire whatsoever to smell, taste and feel. Still, it was an awesome book that I really need to reread.

It's..."
Have to agree, Tom, but I practically feel like I'm in the middle of it all while I'm reading. Very effective writing.


Agree with you completely, Chandler. This definitely takes you right there to Randall's front porch, the saloon, and the mill itself. I feel like the fly on the wall. Besides the dialogue between Randall and Byron, I am very much enjoying that between Merville and the old priest.

I know I'm going to have to read that one too, LeAnne. And anything else Gautreaux has written :)

I read this one in February, 2014, and still remember feeling every drop of sweat, every mosquito bite, the humidity, the mud during the rains, etc. One of my favorite phrases was "The many fanged geophraphy of the swamp", an apt description if ever there was one.