
Tom Davis (4) (1970–)
Author of Red Letters: Living a Faith That Bleeds
For other authors named Tom Davis, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Tom Davis writes about life in the American South in short stories, articles, and poems. Davis, a resident of Fayetteville, N.C., uses personal experience, imagination, and humor to tell stories about Southern people and events. Davis combines true elements, such as the names of actual persons and show more events that really took place, with descriptions of imaginary people and places. Davis's books include What Would You Like on Your Mashed Potatoes?, The Long and the Short, Pickberry Pig, and The Patrol Order. Davis's works are also included in A Loving Voice and A Loving Voice II, anthologies of read-aloud short stories. Davis also publishes extensively in newspapers and journals, such as The Carolina Runner, Poet's Sanctuary, and Special Warfare, a professional military journal published by the Special Warfare Center. He has won numerous awards from Byline, a national magazine for writers. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Works by Tom Davis
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1970
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- Colorado, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Colorado, USA
Members
Reviews
This novel is a prime example of agenda fiction. The point of view alternates between two first-person accounts: photojournalist Stuart Daniels, who has come to Swaziland hoping to take a career-resurrecting photo, and twelve-year-old Adanna, a Swazi girl barely surviving in a land of starvation and abuse. The plot isn't so much a linear arc as a series of events demonstrating the plight of Africa. Stuart arrives skeptical and jaded and leaves transformed by all that he's witnessed.
The show more author succeeds in transporting his readers to a bleak landscape unfamiliar to most. American readers "know" that daily life in Africa is a struggle, but the events depicted here give stark detail to abstract knowledge. As agenda fiction goes, the purpose here is one that can't be argued with or, hopefully, shrugged away.
As a novel, though, the book's craft didn't satisfy me. For the first 80-something pages, the reader is forced to swim through a soup of similes. Every single description is a comparison. This improves later in the book, but similes are still overused, often two or more in a paragraph. The characters are not individuals with quirks but rather mouthpieces for the author's message. The majority of the dialogue reads like a nonfiction essay on the horrors of African village life. Character conversations usually consist of sharing information or planning what to do next.
The themes/content and potential of the book rate four stars, but the prose, dialogue, and characterization earn two. I'm glad I read it, though. I learned a lot, especially from the afterword interview with the author. This book provides American readers with a needed education. show less
The show more author succeeds in transporting his readers to a bleak landscape unfamiliar to most. American readers "know" that daily life in Africa is a struggle, but the events depicted here give stark detail to abstract knowledge. As agenda fiction goes, the purpose here is one that can't be argued with or, hopefully, shrugged away.
As a novel, though, the book's craft didn't satisfy me. For the first 80-something pages, the reader is forced to swim through a soup of similes. Every single description is a comparison. This improves later in the book, but similes are still overused, often two or more in a paragraph. The characters are not individuals with quirks but rather mouthpieces for the author's message. The majority of the dialogue reads like a nonfiction essay on the horrors of African village life. Character conversations usually consist of sharing information or planning what to do next.
The themes/content and potential of the book rate four stars, but the prose, dialogue, and characterization earn two. I'm glad I read it, though. I learned a lot, especially from the afterword interview with the author. This book provides American readers with a needed education. show less
Scared is a novel that absolutely captured my heart and focused my mind. It is a novel that captures a dozen emotions and makes you feel them all at once. It is a novel that tells a story that needs to be told and does it in a way that dares you to forget it.
Swaziland. Do you know where that country is? Africa. It is a small country. Completely surrounded by the country of South Africa. And completely overwhelmed by poverty and by an AIDS crisis.
Adanna is a young girl, an orphan who is show more fighting for survival of herself and her younger siblings in a community facing devastating odds. It is a heartbreaking scene of hunger, disease, death, and injustice. The sweet, innocent Adanna is the kind of person who I would want to know- brave, generous, thoughtful, determined. Can she beat the odds that are stacked against her?
Stuart Daniels is an award-winning photojournalist who has hit rock bottom. His last hope for redemption rests in Swaziland where he hopes to capture the story of the AIDS crisis in a fresh and revealing way. What he finds there is more than a renewal of his career. He finds a spiritual renewal. He can't find God in all of the death and tragedy- until he meets Adanna. Adanna, whose very nature is the very one that all Christians strive towards in life.
I had not read Christian fiction in a very long time. Probably ten years. That is why I chose CF for the Take Another Chance Challenge for the Genre Switch-Up category. The CF I had been exposed to was that of Beverly Lewis and Janette Oke and I didn't like it at all. It was too "in my face." But Davis' novel is about the understated tones and he gets the point across without shoving it down the reader's throat (not that this is the intention of any author, but just my reaction to the books I had previously read). I liked the way the message was conveyed and I personally thought it was much more effective.
Here are some of the passages from the book that stood out to me. Special thanks to Kristi of Books and Needlepoint and to Audra Jennings of B&B Media Group for this review copy.
"I want the world to know I'm a human being," Samson says, "Although I have a terrible disease, I still have feelings, I still have fears, and I'm still a child of God. It's a very strange thing when you're sick and you're entire community, people who have known you for years, treat you like a leper."
There is no justice here. Only fear. I am convinced this is the very root of wickedness. Precious leans into me, quiet as a mouse. Birds chirp in the distance. The baby sighs. And I am suffocated with my inability to help these children.
"The land of AIDS, huh? You say it like it's a medal of honor or something."
"No sense in hiding the truth, Stuart. The worst enemy is the one that's unexposed."
Before I can calculate how many children I could feed simply by cutting back to one Starbucks a week, a loud honk startles me and a brand-new Mercedes van speeds by on the rocky dirt road. "Food Vison" is written on the side.
"Food Vision. So where's the food?"
"That's what I want to know." show less
Swaziland. Do you know where that country is? Africa. It is a small country. Completely surrounded by the country of South Africa. And completely overwhelmed by poverty and by an AIDS crisis.
Adanna is a young girl, an orphan who is show more fighting for survival of herself and her younger siblings in a community facing devastating odds. It is a heartbreaking scene of hunger, disease, death, and injustice. The sweet, innocent Adanna is the kind of person who I would want to know- brave, generous, thoughtful, determined. Can she beat the odds that are stacked against her?
Stuart Daniels is an award-winning photojournalist who has hit rock bottom. His last hope for redemption rests in Swaziland where he hopes to capture the story of the AIDS crisis in a fresh and revealing way. What he finds there is more than a renewal of his career. He finds a spiritual renewal. He can't find God in all of the death and tragedy- until he meets Adanna. Adanna, whose very nature is the very one that all Christians strive towards in life.
I had not read Christian fiction in a very long time. Probably ten years. That is why I chose CF for the Take Another Chance Challenge for the Genre Switch-Up category. The CF I had been exposed to was that of Beverly Lewis and Janette Oke and I didn't like it at all. It was too "in my face." But Davis' novel is about the understated tones and he gets the point across without shoving it down the reader's throat (not that this is the intention of any author, but just my reaction to the books I had previously read). I liked the way the message was conveyed and I personally thought it was much more effective.
Here are some of the passages from the book that stood out to me. Special thanks to Kristi of Books and Needlepoint and to Audra Jennings of B&B Media Group for this review copy.
"I want the world to know I'm a human being," Samson says, "Although I have a terrible disease, I still have feelings, I still have fears, and I'm still a child of God. It's a very strange thing when you're sick and you're entire community, people who have known you for years, treat you like a leper."
There is no justice here. Only fear. I am convinced this is the very root of wickedness. Precious leans into me, quiet as a mouse. Birds chirp in the distance. The baby sighs. And I am suffocated with my inability to help these children.
"The land of AIDS, huh? You say it like it's a medal of honor or something."
"No sense in hiding the truth, Stuart. The worst enemy is the one that's unexposed."
Before I can calculate how many children I could feed simply by cutting back to one Starbucks a week, a loud honk startles me and a brand-new Mercedes van speeds by on the rocky dirt road. "Food Vison" is written on the side.
"Food Vision. So where's the food?"
"That's what I want to know." show less
What an incredible story! You'd have to have a heart of stone not to be emotionally moved. It was disheartening and yet uplifting, evocative and intense, and yet love and healing filled the pages. This book should be an award winner. Seriously. I've rarely experienced this level of realism in a novel, especially in the CBA. One caution, though. Don't read this novel if you have a weak stomach or if atrocities will give you flashbacks. It's harsh in some places, but sooo worth reading.
Scared is the story of Adanna, a young girl living in Swaziland, just northeast of South Africa. It tells of her and her young siblings life growing up in an AIDS infected and poverty stricken land. A land where men aren't around to support their families because they have died or are working in the mines. A place where the men that are left think it is ok to use little girls to satisfy their urges. A place where death and sickness are so prevalent there is no family unaffected.
It also tells show more the story of a young international photographer, Stuart. A man on a mission, to get the right picture and save his career. A man who arrives in Swaziland to do one thing but leaves a changed man after living the life with the people.
The book, written by Thomas Davis, a man who has obviously spent much time in Africa due to his incredibly detailed depictions of Africa, is an incredibly difficult read. Although the book is fiction, it accurately depicts the plight of the widows and orphans of many parts of Africa. I dare you to read it. You will not be unchanged. show less
It also tells show more the story of a young international photographer, Stuart. A man on a mission, to get the right picture and save his career. A man who arrives in Swaziland to do one thing but leaves a changed man after living the life with the people.
The book, written by Thomas Davis, a man who has obviously spent much time in Africa due to his incredibly detailed depictions of Africa, is an incredibly difficult read. Although the book is fiction, it accurately depicts the plight of the widows and orphans of many parts of Africa. I dare you to read it. You will not be unchanged. show less
You May Also Like
Statistics
- Works
- 4
- Members
- 378
- Popularity
- #63,850
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 8
- ISBNs
- 60
- Languages
- 2










