01/07/2019
In rural southern Appalachia, where many toil away in the mines and the opioid epidemic has devastated communities, the body of Harlowe Compton’s older brother, Nate, is dumped on the family’s front porch on Harlowe’s 18th birthday. Harlowe is certain the Praters, the most powerful family in Strickland County, are responsible, and he worries that Nate’s death is part of a larger drug-related conspiracy. Both his growing affection for Tennessee Moore, daughter of the abusive new foreman at the Praters’ mine, and his inquiry into his brother’s death spur Harlowe to make a choice between a future in Strickland County or striking out into the unknown. The romance between Harlowe and Tennessee is the story’s focus, but Harlowe’s relationships with his family, both biological and chosen, will linger most with readers. Debut author Russell faithfully renders the distinctive cultural norms and stark realities of Appalachian life, including the depth of poverty, while reminding readers of the region’s beauty and resilience. Along the way, she sends a subtle message that embracing one’s background, rather than fighting against it, can provide a road to the future. Ages 13–up. Agent: Cindy Uh, Thompson Literary. (Jan.)
A stirring, powerful, and heart-wrenching story of coming-of-age, falling in love, and trying to lead a life of dignity.” — Jeff Zenter, Morris Award-Winning Author of The Serpent King
“Driven by mystery and peppered with themes relevant to young readers such as identity, betrayal, and romance. A bleak yet compelling portrayal of Appalachian mountain life.” — Kirkus Reviews
“Complex and realistic…written with impressive nuance and strength. Russell’s debut offers a moving picture of a specific time and place.” — ALA Booklist
“A gritty portrait of poverty and the opioid crisis in the rural South… Readers will be reminded of plotlines from Riverdale , and will appreciate the thoughtful character development and suspenseful pacing.” — School Library Journal
“The romance between Harlowe and Tennessee is the story’s focus, but Harlowe’s relationships with his family…will linger most with readers. Debut author Russell faithfully renders the distinctive cultural norms and stark realities of Appalachian life, including the depth of poverty, while reminding readers of the region’s beauty and resilience. Along the way, she sends a subtle message that embracing one’s background, rather than fighting against it, can provide a road to the future.” — Publishers Weekly
“Harlowe’s melancholy narration makes this satisfying backcountry noir from the start... a vivid portrayal of a county literally and figuratively stained and disfigured by the mine, in which it’s nearly impossible to thrive and from which it’s nearly impossible to escape.” — Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books
Complex and realistic…written with impressive nuance and strength. Russell’s debut offers a moving picture of a specific time and place.
A stirring, powerful, and heart-wrenching story of coming-of-age, falling in love, and trying to lead a life of dignity.
Harlowe’s melancholy narration makes this satisfying backcountry noir from the start... a vivid portrayal of a county literally and figuratively stained and disfigured by the mine, in which it’s nearly impossible to thrive and from which it’s nearly impossible to escape.
Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books
Harlowe’s melancholy narration makes this satisfying backcountry noir from the start... a vivid portrayal of a county literally and figuratively stained and disfigured by the mine, in which it’s nearly impossible to thrive and from which it’s nearly impossible to escape.
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
11/01/2018
Gr 9 Up— A gritty portrait of poverty and the opioid crisis in the rural South. Eighteen-year-old Harlowe Compton struggles to stay hopeful after growing up in poverty-ridden Strickland County, a present-day coal mining region. The helplessness he feels surrounding his brother's recent murder is compounded by his mother's addiction to prescription pain killers and the grip of the Prater family, who control everything from the mines to local law enforcement. A chance meeting with the new girl, Tennessee Moore, changes his outlook as he imagines the possibility of having a life with her far away from Strickland and the bleak future that seems inevitable. The strength of this debut novel is in the steady growth of the protagonist from victim to unlikely hero of his circumstances. When Harlowe realizes that his brother's death is connected to illegal activity surrounding the mine and its owner, he is forced to glean wisdom from every interaction with peers and elders to save himself from the same fate. Readers will be reminded of plotlines from Riverdale , and will appreciate the thoughtful character development and suspenseful pacing. The thrill and frustration of first love are experienced alongside the full-on struggle for survival by major and minor characters. Russell's ability to capture the underworld of drug violence while keeping the story edifying is balanced through heartening scenes of rural life and love and believable dialogue. VERDICT The tough narrative offers teens from all societal demographics a grim look at the ripple effects of drug abuse on families and communities. Recommended.—Jane Miller, Nashville Public Library
2018-09-30
In Strickland County, coal is king, opiate abuse is rampant, and a wide valley separates those who have power from those who do not.
Eighteen-year-old Harlowe is making plans for a life outside of Strickland when violence arrives on his doorstep, leaving behind the dead body of his older brother, Nate. The murder and its implications decimate Harlowe's family, sending his mother back into the grip of addiction and pulling his father deeper into the mines. Harlowe becomes desperate for answers, chasing fragmented clues and secrets that Nate left behind. His feverish obsession with uncovering the truth can only be matched by his fiery desire for Tennessee, a beautiful girl who also knows sadness and who arrives in his life just as Nate is taken from it. The portrait of life in fictional Strickland, with its poverty, corruption, and pollution, is grim but not far-fetched. Glimmers of hope exist in characters' deep connections to the land and tight bonds with those they trust, but readers will wonder if Harlowe can truly flourish if he stays in the home he's always known. Characters are assumed white; the portrayal of self-reliant and isolated Appalachian culture is unmistakable; gender roles are traditional and rigid. Though the storyline occasionally meanders, it is driven by mystery and peppered with themes relevant to young readers such as identity, betrayal, and romance.
A bleak yet compelling portrayal of Appalachian mountain life. (Fiction. 14-18)