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Salvage This World

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In Michael Farris Smith's latest "riveting" epic, a young woman returns home with her child to her ghost-haunted father, while a religious extremist hunts the stormridden territory to find the girl who may be the region's savior. (Laird Hunt, National Book Award-nominated author of Zorrie and Neverhome)

There was no rising from the dead and there was no hand to calm the storms and there was no peace in no valley.
 
In the hurricane-ravaged bottomlands of South Mississippi, where stores are closing and jobs are few, a fierce zealot has gained a foothold, capitalizing on the vulnerability of a dwindling population and a burning need for hope. As she preaches and promises salvation from the light of the pulpit, in the shadows she sows the seeds of violence.
 
Elsewhere, Jessie and her toddler, Jace, are on the run across the Mississippi/Louisiana line, in a resentful return to her childhood home and her desolate father. Holt, Jace's father, is missing and hunted by a brutish crowd, and an old man witnesses the wrong thing in the depths of night. In only a matter of days, all of their lives will collide, and be altered, in the maelstrom of the changing world.
 
At once elegiac and profound, Salvage This World journeys into the heart of a region growing darker and less forgiving, and asks how we keep going—what do we hold onto—in a land where God has fled.
  Garden & Gun Top Reads of 2023 • Bibliolifestyle Best Literary Fiction of 2023  Southern Living Southern Writers to Read Right Now
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    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2022

      In hurricane-drenched, job-scarce southern Mississippi, a zealous preacher promises salvation to her flock while encouraging violence on the side. Meanwhile, Jessie and toddler son Jace head desperately toward her childhood home as Jace's father runs from an angry mob. It's a savage world; can it be salvaged? From the author of attention getters like Desperation Road and the multi-best-booked Blackwood; with a 45,000-copy first printing.

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 6, 2023
      Smith (Nick) melds fire and brimstone with the ravages of hurricanes in this evocative noir of the Mississippi Delta. Jessie raises her young son Jace with Holt, who works as a roustabout for a traveling revival meeting, the Temple of Pain and Glory. The temple’s sinister minister, Elser, goes on a tear after a set of keys goes missing, claiming they were linked to a divine revelation. Elser suspects Holt of the theft, prompting her shotgun-toting disciples to chase Jessie out, and Jessie flees with Jace to her childhood home in Louisiana. There, she reconnects with her estranged but caring father, Wade, an offshore driller who is out of work due to frequent storms. Smith colors in Elser’s backstory, showing how she gave hope to Holt and others amid devastation. Now, Holt risks everything to protect Jessie and Jace, fearing Elser’s followers will kill them. Before it’s all over, the bloody chain of events drags all involved to “the Bottom,” a gothic hinterland of local legend. Smith perfectly depicts a landscape of dwindling resources and limited prospects, where crime turns out to be the most expedient solution. There’s plenty of human drama in this gritty literary thriller.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from March 1, 2023
      A theft and a deadly chase darken the lives of a young family. "The Gulf Coast region had begun to take on a hurricane every few months. There was no longer an off season." In a region blighted by foul weather, a man named Holt hooks up with the revivalist Temple of Pain and Glory until he goes sour on the money-grubbing hellfire homilies purveyed by its leader, Elser. He steals from her a pair of black keys and ignites a relentless manhunt that also targets Jessie, the young woman whom Holt met during his fugitive years, and their son. When Holt abandons her, leaving the keys, Jessie turns to her estranged father. The keys may be connected to a mystical child Elser cites in her sermons "who has the ability to control the weather" and to some Southern-gothic place called the Bottom. Smith's last outing, Nick (2021), was an audacious prequel to The Great Gatsby with a harrowing section in New Orleans. But five of his six novels are closely related in themes, blue-collar cast, and settings in Louisiana and Mississippi. This new work suggests a prequel to his first novel, Rivers (2013), a tale of greed and desperation set in a Gulf Coast region so storm-ravaged that Washington calls for permanent evacuation. In Blackwood (2020), Smith revisited characters from The Fighter (2018). Maybe he's building his own Faulkner-esque universe around his hometown of Oxford, Mississippi. So far it looks to be a grim corpus in which bad luck and bad choices--and the exceptionally foul weather of Rivers and this book--erode lives to a raw minimum. Yet Smith's tense, brooding narratives also reveal a terrible beauty in his characters' struggles to flee or defeat the cruelty and violence they face, to find moments in which hope and love are more than memories. An exceptional storyteller in top form.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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