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One Mississippi

One Mississippi


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Product Description
"There is nothing small about Childress's fine novel. It's big in all the ways that matter - big in daring, big in insight, and big-hearted. Really, really big-hearted." -New Orleans Times-Picayune

This exuberantly acclaimed novel by the author of the bestselling Crazy in Alabama tells an uproarious and moving story about family, best friends, first love, and surviving the scariest years of your life.

You need only one best friend, Daniel Musgrove figures, to make it through high school alive. After his family moves to Mississippi just before his junior year, Daniel finds fellow outsider Tim Cousins. The two become inseparable, sharing a fascination with ridicule, The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour, and Arnita Beecham, the most bewitching girl at Minor High. But soon things go terribly wrong. The friends commit a small crime that grows larger and larger, and threatens to engulf the whole town. Arnita, the first black prom queen in the history of the school, is injured and wakes up a different person. And Daniel, Tim, and their families are swept up in a shocking chain of events.

"Wise, riveting, hilarious, painful, gentle, and ferocious, One Mississippi is a wonderful read." -Anne Lamott

"A Tilt-a-Whirl that flings the reader from comedy to calamity. . . . Childress is a fabulist in the manner of John Irving." -Atlanta Journal-Constitution

"By turns rollicking and troubling, as provocative as it is droll, One Mississippi is about as easy to resist as a riptide. This critic's advice is to go with its powerful flow." -RaleighNews & Observer

Spotlight Customer Reviews:
Customer Rating:
  
Summary:
   Wanted to Love It
Comment:
   I wanted to LOVE this book. It had all the elements in place for a book that I should love. But in the end I finished with a strong sense of like. This book, for me, was the boy that your mama wanted you to date because he was so perfect for you and the fit on paper was excellent, but in the end you had to be "just friends" because the chemistry was missing. I can't say how others will view this book, but for me the chemistry just wasn't there.

But when I say the elements were in place, they really are there. You have the loner, the outcast, the bully, the crazy family; add to the mix the generally apathetic high school administration, a football crazed community, one teacher who "gets" it, and many closets full of skeletons. The book should have been dark and outrageously funny. It should have rivaled "Gods in Alabama", which had most of the same elements in play, as a dark, violent comedy. But for me, it didn't. It was a good story, the book was well written, the characterizations were good. But it lacked that certain something that made reading compelling. In the end, this is a well written, well conceived book with good execution that has has all the excitement and intrigue of a gay prom date.
Customer Rating:
  
Summary:
   Owes a debt to Richard Bradford
Comment:
   Childress has uncannily captured a great deal of the wit and tenderness of Richard Bradford's great novel Red Sky at Morning (my all-time favorite; read it if you haven't), centering on the cultural/geographic displacement of a teenage boy and his developing bond with another youth--one also on the social fringe, but for different reasons. Like Bradford's novel, this one engages the topics of war, marital frailty, economic disparity, the labyrinth pecking order of high school, and most notably, interracial dating. Childress' book is a darker one, as he allows his characters to explore more deeply into dark corners of human suffering. There is great sadness here, and the reader will grieve loss, yet you will sense the unwavering fondness the author feels for his players.
Customer Rating:
  
Summary:
   Interesting, but......
Comment:
   While I enjoyed the references to 70's culture, which brought back lots of memories, I just don't see this as a humorous book at all. (the cover even featured a quote from, of all people, Stephen King, that it was the funniest novel he'd read in ten years--guess I should have considered the source) On the contrary, it was very dark, from beginning to end. Many of the characters were downright disturbing, from Daniel's father to Arnita, to Tim, as well as some of the minor characters. It is difficult to elaborate on these comments without giving away key events, but Daniel's father was a most unsympathetic character, the effects of Arnita's injury are far from humorous, her mother is strange and disturbing, the "Christ" play was too ridiculous to be believed, and Tim was one creepy character from the start. One had to wonder over and over why Daniel would want to be friends with him. The ending was really bizarre, even though there was plenty of foreshadowing, so not that much of a surprise. It just didn't seem to fit. However, I am most puzzled by the depiction of this story as "humorous," "uproarious," "hilarious," or "rollicking." Disturbing, dark, and troubling are more accurate.
Customer Rating:
  
Summary:
   Unsatisfying, but readable
Comment:
   An average book. While some plot lines were never explained or resolved, the characterization was believable and well-done. I saw many twists and turns from a mile away, partly because good chunks of this book were cliches or contrived ideas.

As for the "humor," there isn't much of it. I severely question Stephen King's opinion of "funny." I would say this book has a LIGHT side and DARK side, but nothing funny. This book is not a comedy.

Am I glad I payed $11.50 for this book? No. I suggest you borrow this from a friend or local library.
Customer Rating:
  
Summary:
   Funny? You thought this was funny?! (Partial spoiler inside)
Comment:
   According to the reviews all over the book jacket, this book ought to be a laugh riot. Stephen King says, "Funniest novel I've read in 10 years!" Seemingly, everyone else concurs - this is one funny book.

Hmmm, let's take a look, shall we? We've got a hit-and-run accident, a brain injury, wanton destruction of property, bullying, pedophilia, suicide, parental abuse, racial tension, and a school schooting that results in 5 dead. Oh my god, they're right, that IS funny - how could I have missed that?

I'll give it 3 stars because, despite the misrepresentation on the jacket and the highly unnecessary and disturbing school shooting, it is quite readable, and the main character and his love interest are very likeable.

But I just want to know what Stephen King usually reads.

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