The Ghosts of Hawthorn Missouri: Part One

The Ghosts of Hawthorn, #1

Fiction & Literature, African American, Coming of Age, Historical
Cover of the book The Ghosts of Hawthorn Missouri: Part One by James Peet, Persimmon
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Author: James Peet ISBN: 9781386453987
Publisher: Persimmon Publication: October 3, 2018
Imprint: Language: English
Author: James Peet
ISBN: 9781386453987
Publisher: Persimmon
Publication: October 3, 2018
Imprint:
Language: English

"A small-town Midwestern community suffers and seeks salvation in Jackass Flats, a dead-end section of Hawthorn, Missouri. The neighborhood has a checkered past; not long after its founding, the pastor's wife was found shot between the eyes, and Pastor Stephen Shrine was hanged by members of the Ku Klux Klan. For generations, the residents bore the weight of this brutal legacy. Currently, the Haights are the only African-American family in Jackass Flats. The racial tension is palpable, and 9-year-old Terrence Haight has already developed an "internal strength" and an "involuntary hardness." As he grows older, he develops a love of music, and after leaving the Army, he attends college in the hope of becoming a music teacher. His hopes are realized in Hawthorn only to be suddenly dashed when he's accused of having an affair with a white student. Meanwhile, Father Redmond, the current pastor of Hawthorn Baptist Church, positions himself as the one man who can hold the community together—but he seems far closer to the devil than to the God he purports to serve. 

One can draw parallels between this book's dark opening and John Steinbeck's Cannery Row (1945), as both capture a world inside a vacuum. As with Steinbeck, readers will become deeply engaged in the characters' clumsy navigations through life, hoping that redemption or reparation will follow. Peet is a skilled writer who offers succinct and unique turns of phrase: "The wrinkles of Jim Crow hadn't yet been fully ironed out in that part of the country." Overall, he delivers a masterful debut that moves provocatively between a nightmare and grim reality. 

A darkly enthralling tale that highlights Peet as a writer to watch." - Kirkus Starred Review

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"A small-town Midwestern community suffers and seeks salvation in Jackass Flats, a dead-end section of Hawthorn, Missouri. The neighborhood has a checkered past; not long after its founding, the pastor's wife was found shot between the eyes, and Pastor Stephen Shrine was hanged by members of the Ku Klux Klan. For generations, the residents bore the weight of this brutal legacy. Currently, the Haights are the only African-American family in Jackass Flats. The racial tension is palpable, and 9-year-old Terrence Haight has already developed an "internal strength" and an "involuntary hardness." As he grows older, he develops a love of music, and after leaving the Army, he attends college in the hope of becoming a music teacher. His hopes are realized in Hawthorn only to be suddenly dashed when he's accused of having an affair with a white student. Meanwhile, Father Redmond, the current pastor of Hawthorn Baptist Church, positions himself as the one man who can hold the community together—but he seems far closer to the devil than to the God he purports to serve. 

One can draw parallels between this book's dark opening and John Steinbeck's Cannery Row (1945), as both capture a world inside a vacuum. As with Steinbeck, readers will become deeply engaged in the characters' clumsy navigations through life, hoping that redemption or reparation will follow. Peet is a skilled writer who offers succinct and unique turns of phrase: "The wrinkles of Jim Crow hadn't yet been fully ironed out in that part of the country." Overall, he delivers a masterful debut that moves provocatively between a nightmare and grim reality. 

A darkly enthralling tale that highlights Peet as a writer to watch." - Kirkus Starred Review

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