Narrow the Road - by James Wade (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- In this gripping coming-of-age odyssey, a young man's quest to reunite his family takes him on a life-altering journey through the wilds of 1930s East Texas, where both danger and opportunity grow as thick as the pines.With his father missing and his mother gravely ill, William Carter is struggling to keep his family's cotton farm afloat in the face of drought and foreclosure.
- Author(s): James Wade
- 306 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Coming of Age
Description
Book Synopsis
In this gripping coming-of-age odyssey, a young man's quest to reunite his family takes him on a life-altering journey through the wilds of 1930s East Texas, where both danger and opportunity grow as thick as the pines.
With his father missing and his mother gravely ill, William Carter is struggling to keep his family's cotton farm afloat in the face of drought and foreclosure. As his options wane, William receives a mysterious letter that claims to know his father's whereabouts.
Together with his best friend Ollie, a mortician in training, William sets out to find his father and bring him home to set things right. But before the boys can complete their quest, they must navigate the labyrinth of the Big Thicket, some of the country's most uncharted, untamed land. Along the way they encounter eccentric backwoods characters of every order, running afoul of murderers, bootleggers, and even the legendary Bonnie and Clyde.
But the danger is doubled when the boys agree to take on a medicine show runaway named Lena, eliciting the ire of the show's leader, the nefarious con man Doctor Downtain. As William, Ollie, and Lena race to uncover the clues and find William's father, Downtain is closing in on them, readying to make good on his violent reputation. With the clock ticking, William must decide where his loyalties lie and how far he's willing to go for the people he loves.
From award-winning author James Wade, Narrow the Road is a riveting exploration of a young man's hard-won coming-of-age and the courageous ways a person can forge a singular path in the face of overwhelming adversity. Alive with grit and tenderness, this is an unforgettable story of the power of friendship to sustain us through loss, betrayal, and devastating consequence.
Review Quotes
"A poignant, lyrical, often funny coming-of-age odyssey set in the East Texas wilds of a century ago. James Wade has established himself as one of the Lone Star State's best young novelists, and this tale of Dust Bowl grit and adolescent discovery is a must-read for fans of Cormac McCarthy, Charles Portis, or Paulette Jiles."
-- "Taylor Brown, Southern Book Prize winner and author of Rednecks""This moving odyssey is a testament to the power of resilience, friendship, and the unyielding spirit of those who refuse to give up in the face of unimaginable circumstances."
-- "Texas Highways""A compelling plot with richly drawn characters. Narrow the Road is an absolutely wonderful story!"
-- "Marc Cameron, New York Times bestselling author""Mythic and sweeping yet intimate and humble, in Narrow the Road James Wade summons a storm of words and emotions and masters it like a prophet in the eye of his own hurricane. One of America's greatest storytellers, he has delivered yet another memorable masterpiece."
-- "Rudy Ruiz, author of The Border Between Us""One of the best journey novels I've read in a long time. You can feel the sting of sweat in your eyes and smell the foulness of Texas's Big Thicket. James Wade is the Western's heir apparent to Cormac McCarthy."
-- "Johnny D. Boggs, ten-time Spur Award winner""Wade delivers a rewarding tale of a boy's quest to find his father...reminiscent of Davis Grubb's classic Southern gothic The Night of the Hunter, with its stark evocation of good versus evil. This odyssey of the West is tough to shake."
-- "Publishers Weekly (starred review)""Narrow the Road is a saga that could be likened to other master storytellers, but Wade's voice is his own. In this impressive, adventuresome tale with its profound sense of place, vibrant characters, and richly detailed prose, I was captured not only by Wade's compassionate understanding of the human condition but his aptitude for striking a measured balance between pivotal and contemplative scenes. A soulful, thoughtful, and wise story I didn't want to end."
-- "Donna Everhart, author of Women of a Promiscuous Nature""In prose of spellbinding beauty, James Wade spins a haunting, harrowing odyssey of a boy who becomes a man while searching for his father through the pines and thickets of East Texas. Suspenseful, poetic, and with characters who are not soon forgotten, Narrow the Road asks what one is willing to risk for family and friends and who one becomes when the world is at its most brutal."
-- "Amanda Churchill, author of The Turtle House""This is a haunting and lyrical journey down an uncertain path, where dangers lurk in the shadows, but friendship and courage will help us survive in a broken world."
-- "Wes Ferguson, journalist, podcaster, and author of Running the River""Wade's crackling dialogue, lyrical descriptions, and old-fashioned storytelling lead the reader in a way that few modern authors can. Narrow the Road is a salve--something spiritual in a heretical time. Embrace James Wade, and wonder what hidden muse sits next to him, teasing out such magical tales of goodness, grace, tragedy, and redemption."
-- "Sid Balman Jr., Pulitzer Prize-nominated journalist and author of The Mural""Author James Wade paints with words and is destined to become one of the Lone Star State's most valued authors. Narrow the Road is the purest form of Texas literature, and Wade's lyrical prose is as beautiful as a springtime bluebonnet. His fully formed characters spring to life, and the setting is so real, we can feel the heat, the danger and humidity of deep East Texas, the Dust Bowl grit in our teeth, and the gut-wrenching sadness of betrayal. Not since The Grapes of Wrath and a desperate family's journey down the Tom Joad Road has an author submerged readers so deeply into the Great Depression. A must-read."
-- "Reavis Z. Wortham, author of the Texas Red River Mysteries"