Eat, Drink, and Be From Mississippi: A Novel
Autor Nanci Kincaiden Limba Engleză Hardback – 5 ian 2009
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780316009157
ISBN-10: 0316009156
Pagini: 400
Dimensiuni: 146 x 216 x 34 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Little, Brown and Company
Colecția Little Brown and Company
ISBN-10: 0316009156
Pagini: 400
Dimensiuni: 146 x 216 x 34 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Little, Brown and Company
Colecția Little Brown and Company
Notă biografică
Nanci Kincaid is the author of Crossing Blood, Balls, Pretending the Bed Is a Raft (made into the feature film My Life Without Me), Verbena, and As Hot as it Was You Ought to Thank Me. She divides her time between San Jose and Honolulu.
Recenzii
"With a sensibility as sweet as a glass of sugary iced tea and a plot as placid as a hazy summer day, Kincaid's sixth book (after As Hot As It Was You Ought to Thank Me) tracks the domestic travails of Truely and Courtney Noonan, brother and sister Mississippians who have forsaken sleepy rural life for adventure in California.... Though they both live in the Bay Area, these rootless siblings seldom cross paths, until Arnold, a black teenager, insinuates himself into their lives. Kincaid has been pigeonholed as a Southern writer, but this unsentimental story about the forging of an unorthodox family has universal appeal."—Publisher's Weekly
"Playing off its tantalizing title, Kincaid's tale offers a fresh, winning take on basic themes of modern life--leaving, longing and reconnecting with childhood."—People Magazine
"It takes a little nerve for a non-native Mississippian to write a novel with "Mississippi" in the title, but [Kincaid] isn't fazed by stepping onto hallowed literary ground. . . . This novel isn't in the end, so much about Mississippi as it is about our American future, and on that subject it is decidedly and sweetly optimistic."—Washington Post
"[T]here's something raffish and whimsical about Kincaid's prose that hooks you good and pulls you in.... [A]ffecting." A-—Entertainment Weekly
"Playing off its tantalizing title, Kincaid's tale offers a fresh, winning take on basic themes of modern life--leaving, longing and reconnecting with childhood."—People Magazine
"It takes a little nerve for a non-native Mississippian to write a novel with "Mississippi" in the title, but [Kincaid] isn't fazed by stepping onto hallowed literary ground. . . . This novel isn't in the end, so much about Mississippi as it is about our American future, and on that subject it is decidedly and sweetly optimistic."—Washington Post
"[T]here's something raffish and whimsical about Kincaid's prose that hooks you good and pulls you in.... [A]ffecting." A-—Entertainment Weekly