With a Hammer for My Heart
A Novel
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
“A story rich in precise, gorgeous language . . . Tragedies old and new weave a tiny Kentucky town into the center of the universe.”—Booklist (starred review)
With a Hammer for My Heart is the story of Lawanda, a precocious, poverty-stricken fifteen-year-old girl from Cardin, Kentucky, who dreams of attending college. When Lawanda’s friendship with an alcoholic World War II veteran named Garland is misinterpreted by their fellow townspeople, a tragedy calls her future into question.
“A compelling, skillfully told story . . . Lyon’s finest achievement.” —Lexington Herald-Leader
“[A] rich tale of healing, redemption, and social responsibility.” —Publishers Weekly
“Lyon consistently reveals in her work an ability to render the peculiarities of the people and the places she knows best, while at the same time exploring concerns that lend her stories and poems universal appeal. The same is true of With a Hammer for My Heart, a powerful first novel that catapults Lyon into the ranks of other well-respected contemporary novelists.” —The Southern Register
“The dialogue in this wonderful story is moving, often funny, and always true to life. YAs will find in Lawanda a revealing picture of a young woman struggling to become her own person in the midst of a loving family whose members think they know what’s best for her.” —School Library Journal
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Lawanda Ingles, the appealing 15-year-old heroine of this resonant debut novel, dreams of being the first person in her family to attend college. Ignoring the scarcity of money in Cardin, Ky., she sets out to sell magazines door to door. At the end of the first day she makes her way up the hill to the home of Amos Garland, a recluse who has lived in two abandoned school buses since his traumatic service in WWII 30 years ago sent him home a guilt-wracked alcoholic. Lawanda enters into an unusual friendship with the crusty old man. But when some punks steal Garland's notebook, which contains thoughts about Lawanda that some townspeople interpret as veiled allusions to an improper relationship, Garland is jailed. Lawanda fights for her friend's freedom, enlisting the help of her grandmother Mamaw, an intuitive healer who was excommunicated from her church for claiming she had a vision in which she saw God as a woman. Lawanda also reaches out to Nancy Catherine, Garland's psychically scarred adult daughter who hasn't seen her father since childhood and remembers him only as an abusive alcoholic. Lyon's rich tale of healing, redemption and social responsibility is told from multiple first-person viewpoints, and although the characters' voices often sound alike, their different viewpoints are distinctive.