“The first comparison that came to mind when I read Magnolia Song was Balzac. We almost never see novels of whole societies anymore, but this is one on a grand scale. The full complexity of the new South isn’t well understood, even by the people who live there—it’s too new, too big. Yet here it is, widescreen.More than breadth, Magnolia Song has depth. Its interweaving stories are all rooted in a philosophic consciousness of history, particularly in its treatment of race relations. On that delicate subject this novel embodies both a cool distance and a compassionate intimacy. When hatred appears, as it must, it hits with a jolt.As for plain old story, this is one of those novels that grabs you and doesn’t let go.” — Thomas McNamee
McNamee is the author of The Grizzly Bear, The Return of the Wolf to Yellowstone, and a historical novel set in Memphis, A Story of Deep Delight. He has also published biographies of notable culinary figures Craig Claiborne and Alice Waters. For his book The Inner Life of Cats he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship.
“It’s not often that a tale this breathtaking manages to sweep up in its headlong trajectory such a gallery of complex, authentic, and utterly mad characters. Nor is it often that such a swift, page-turning narrative can touch such depths and achieve such wisdom along the way. In J. Robert Towery’s Magnolia Song, the South is a carnival of comedy, danger, and heartbreak. The book is a flat-out wonder.” — Steve Stern
Stern is the author of The Wedding Jester, The North of God, The Frozen Rabbi, The Book of Mischief, The Pinch, and The Angel of Forgetfulness. He has been the recipient of an O. Henry Award, five Pushcart Prizes, the Edward Lewis Wallant Award, the National Jewish Book Award, and fellowships from the Fulbright and Guggenhem foundations.
“A ruckus of a novel, filled with characters that are charming, sad, funny and mysterious — sometimes at the exact same time. If there were a soundtrack to Magnolia Song, it’d be loud and happy and ever-so-slightly insane.” — Eric Barnes
Barnes is publisher of The Memphis Daily News, CEO of the Daily Memphian, and author of The City Where We Once Lived