Monsters in Appalachia
Stories
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- $20.99
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- $20.99
Publisher Description
The characters within these fifteen stories are in one way or another staring into the abyss. While some are awaiting redemption, others are fully complicit in their own undoing.
We come upon them in the mountains of West Virginia, in the backyards of rural North Carolina, and at tourist traps along Route 66, where they smolder with hidden desires and struggle to resist the temptations that plague them.
A Melungeon woman has killed her abusive husband and drives by the home of her son’s new foster family, hoping to lure the boy back. An elderly couple witnesses the end-times and is forced to hunt monsters if they hope to survive. A young girl “tanning and manning” with her mother and aunt resists being indoctrinated by their ideas about men. A preacher’s daughter follows in the footsteps of her backsliding mother as she seduces a man who looks a lot like the devil.
A master of Appalachian dialect and colloquial speech, Monks writes prose that is dark, taut, and muscular, but also beguiling and playful. Monsters in Appalachia is a powerful work of fiction.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Monks knows her monsters, both literal and figurative. And she knows the territory of hills and hollers, where reality is sometimes heightened so sharply that it bleeds into myth. The 15 ferociously compressed stories in her collection sear their way into the reader's brain with matter-of-fact horror. In just six pages, the opening story, "Burning Slag," lets one grim, violent moment in the life of a troubled mother point to a future shimmering with brutal shocks. Monks (All the Girls in France) follows it up with the wrenching "Robbing Pillars," a claustrophobic coal-mining tale with a touch of the supernatural. These stories sparkle with dark, extreme humor, such as "Nympho," in which the relatively law-abiding son of Amway-dealing parents finds himself under the sway of a fellow middle schooler given to "throwing his lanky white arms into wild frog punches." Others are naturalistic: a novel's worth of family and community relationships are fitted into "Little Miss Bobcat." And with the title story, the final one in the collection, Monks ventures deep into the realm of myth, for a satisfying vision of the intersection of the momentous and the everyday.